Support guide
Stool stability and safety
A focused shop setup note that links back to the main rolling shop stool guide.
Stool stability and safety note 1
A useful shop stool should move with the work instead of interrupting it. When the stool rolls cleanly and holds a few small tools, the whole bench area feels calmer.
A useful shop stool should move with the work instead of interrupting it. When the stool rolls cleanly and holds a few small tools, the whole bench area feels calmer.
Stool stability and safety note 2
The simplest way to judge a stool is to imagine a normal half-hour task. If you would keep standing to grab parts, adjust posture, or fight the wheels, the design is not helping enough.
The simplest way to judge a stool is to imagine a normal half-hour task. If you would keep standing to grab parts, adjust posture, or fight the wheels, the design is not helping enough.
Stool stability and safety note 3
Stability matters because shop work often involves reaching sideways. A stool should feel predictable when you shift weight, not twitchy or narrow.
Stability matters because shop work often involves reaching sideways. A stool should feel predictable when you shift weight, not twitchy or narrow.
Stool stability and safety note 4
A good support page should not overthink the product. It should explain one practical detail clearly so the main guide is easier to use.
A good support page should not overthink the product. It should explain one practical detail clearly so the main guide is easier to use.