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Rubber mat.

Hardly a workshop tool but....

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David Colwill01/11/2020 10:41:58
782 forum posts
40 photos

Over the last couple of years I seem to have started to feel the cold a little more. This is particularly bad when my feet get cold.

I bough a rubber mat off ebay for £21.99. It is 5 foot by 3 foot and about 3/8" thick. The sides are bevelled and and it has holes that allow oils swarf and finished components to fall in to.

It has made a huge difference to working on the lathe and I have now ordered another for in front of the bench.

There are a number of people selling these and I have no connection with any of them.

Regards.

David.

Mike Hurley01/11/2020 11:09:45
530 forum posts
89 photos

Yes, we all start to feel the cold as we get older... I tend to find that any kind of mat / carpet can sometimes be a bit of a nuisance by moving slightly or creasing up and me tripping on the bits that subsequently stick up.

I made up a couple of lengths of wooden 'duck boards' - simply long strips about 30mm wide nailed onto occasional cross pieces, with about a 25 mm gap between each. They keep your feet off the cold concrete, let metal turnings drop through easily and are easily lifted to find that vital last screw you just dropped (or simply to clean).

Just my personal preference, but obviously whatever suits the individual. is fine. Mike

Bazyle01/11/2020 11:28:53
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6956 forum posts
229 photos

You had a 5ft x 3ft clear floor space in your workshop !!!!! Do they sell 18" x 2ft pieces?

Jouke van der Veen01/11/2020 11:32:21
203 forum posts
19 photos

I suppose you can cut it?

Speedy Builder501/11/2020 11:35:13
2878 forum posts
248 photos

I use old carpet, beside the lathe I have a floor mat, probably ex Sketchly office services which served as the door mat to a company, tapered rubber edges (Non trip) and some sort of man made fibre carpet. My Dad's workshop had 1/2" ply boards over concrete. The boards were originally used as sacrificial boards under alloy sheets which were routed out for aircraft panels.

Alistair Robertson 101/11/2020 11:40:40
154 forum posts
6 photos

I bought a couple 600 x 900 mats from BigDUG **LINK**

They wanted to charge £15 delivery but I objected as the charge did not show until checkout so I got free delivery!

They are very good mats and perfect for a workshop.

David Colwill01/11/2020 11:58:48
782 forum posts
40 photos
Posted by Bazyle on 01/11/2020 11:28:53:

You had a 5ft x 3ft clear floor space in your workshop !!!!! Do they sell 18" x 2ft pieces?

Damn it! I must have been burgled. smile p

Alistair.

I looked at the smaller mats but they were nearly as much as the larger ones (on ebay at least).

Jouke van der Veen.

I will probably get another and cut it in half as this seems to be cheaper than buying smaller ones.

David.

Paul Lousick01/11/2020 12:12:09
2276 forum posts
801 photos

Try your local hardware store. If like the ones here in Australia they sell a number of rubber mats of various cut sizes and on a roll and sold by the metre. Insulation from the cold is not as big a problem here but is good to stand on and prevent aching feet from standing on a hard floor.  I also have a 6' x 4' x 1/2" piece on the floor of my car trailer to cushion the load.

Paul.

Edited By Paul Lousick on 01/11/2020 12:16:08

HOWARDT01/11/2020 12:28:37
1081 forum posts
39 photos

I use foam rubber mats from Halfords, and other places. Pack of six, I think 600mm square, link together with edge pieces, £10 the set. Used them both in the shed on wood floor and garage on concrete, been down four years and still good, insulate well.

Nick Clarke 301/11/2020 12:32:45
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1607 forum posts
69 photos
Posted by HOWARDT on 01/11/2020 12:28:37:

I use foam rubber mats from Halfords, and other places. Pack of six, I think 600mm square, link together with edge pieces, £10 the set. Used them both in the shed on wood floor and garage on concrete, been down four years and still good, insulate well.

plus 1

not done it yet01/11/2020 12:38:27
7517 forum posts
20 photos

I also have a 6' x 4' x 1/2" piece on the floor of my car trailer to cushion the load.

We have had this sort of thing for over 25 years, at least. No idea where the roll came from, back then. My ex installed a strip in the bathroom and I later used the rest in front of my workbench and lathe.🙂

Circlip01/11/2020 14:16:02
1723 forum posts

2" x 3/4" laths spaced to suit on 3" x 1" battens, make whatever size you want.

Regards Ian.

duncan webster01/11/2020 14:57:30
5307 forum posts
83 photos

When I converted my garage I had the floor covered with mastic asphalt to get it level and waterproof, then 25mm polystyrene covered with flooring grade chip board, all topped off with the old vinyl flooring from the kitchen. Only downside is you have to cut holes and fit packers under machine feet, but I don't move the machines around very often.

Brian H01/11/2020 15:11:05
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2312 forum posts
112 photos

I used some of the rubber tiles sold for garages and gyms etc, that interlock together. Not expensive.

Brian

Zan01/11/2020 15:36:04
356 forum posts
25 photos

I have several of these. one is about worn out after 10 years
yes they do cut, and are brilliant for

1 collecting swarf so it doesn’t get embedded into shoes

2keeping feet warmer

3 stopping small parts dropped getting lost, they lodge in the holes

Ady101/11/2020 15:43:45
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6137 forum posts
893 photos

Solid concrete garage floor so a pair of old knackered hillwalking boots, so a comfy fit, and double socks

A fleece beanie helps too

And I'm a bad boy but I use leather working gloves too, those yellow things, they make a huge difference when the temp starts heading towards zero, otherwise the cold metal sucks the heat right out of your hands

Means I can work in comfort all winter, my hands are clean and I really can't remember the last time I had to dig out a bit of swarf

Edited By Ady1 on 01/11/2020 15:46:53

Steve Withnell01/11/2020 16:03:31
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858 forum posts
215 photos

I just use a couple of layers of carpet offcut...

Chris Evans 601/11/2020 16:17:53
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2156 forum posts
Posted by Nick Clarke 3 on 01/11/2020 12:32:45:
Posted by HOWARDT on 01/11/2020 12:28:37:

I use foam rubber mats from Halfords, and other places. Pack of six, I think 600mm square, link together with edge pieces, £10 the set. Used them both in the shed on wood floor and garage on concrete, been down four years and still good, insulate well.

plus 1

Plus 2 I have covered my entire double garage floor with them.

larry phelan 101/11/2020 16:29:57
1346 forum posts
15 photos

Been using homemade duckboards for years,, cheap simple, and they really work ! What more could you want ?

Martin Kyte01/11/2020 17:14:29
avatar
3445 forum posts
62 photos

I have flooring grade tongue and groove chipboard on top of underlay on a concrete base. Works very well.

regards Martin

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