Electronics Lab Bench Setup Guide

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Since a very young age, I have been curious about how things work. Thanks to my dad, my curiosity was satiated with an ample supply of tools and knowledge. In 6th grade, I got my first experience with a soldering iron and it all took off from there. Very quickly, I set up a work bench to do my projects on. Over the years, the working setup improved, moved and evolved.

The electronics lab bench has been optimized over the years and redesigned to fit in a smaller space. Its very functional, customized and economical. I use high quality tools but only where it makes sense. Most of the products I use, I have used for a while and have tested other cheaper alternatives, only to land on the current one. Some, I am still figuring out the best version of.

In this article, I will dive deep into every part of my workbench and show you the structure, organization, tools and parts I have collected over the years. The idea is that with this guide, my bench can be replicated with the same functionality in minimal time. Lets get into it. Feel free to navigate to parts you are interested in.

  1. Bench Setup
  2. Organization
  3. Test Equipment
  4. Prototyping Supplies
  5. Soldering Tools
  6. Hand Tools
  7. Consumables
  8. Parts
  9. Computer Workstation
  10. 3D Printer

Bench Setup

The bench is built using a 78″x24″ table top from Ikea and two Alex drawers to support it. The grey matt on the bench is a Weller ESD mat with high temperature resistance. I also have a cutting mat stowed underneath the bench for any cutting needs I may have.

Above the bench are 10″ deep wall mounted shelving. I opted for wall mounted since it is the most compact solution. The shelves are from home depot and I am using the Rubbermaid rail mounting system.

The lighting is done using two 90+ CRI LED strips mounted underneath the lowest shelf, each with a different color temperature. They are controlled using a touch switch and powered from a 24V PSU. The light can be too bright at times so I am planning to add PWM control in the future to modify brightness and net color temperature as well. It also doesn’t spread too evenly so I am looking into a diffuser as well.

All the power distribution is done using a long 12 port power strip that is mounted on a wire management tray. All the PSU’s and power wiring is managed on the tray to avoid a dangly mess underneath the desk.

I also have a bench PC that is extremely useful to collect data, interact with the oscilloscope and view schematics, datasheets etc. The display for the bench is mounted on the wall with a swivel arm.

Ikea – Lagkapten 78×24″ Table Top
Ikea – Alex Drawer
Amazon – Weller ESD Mat
Amazon – Cutting Mat
Homedepot – 72×10″ White Shelf
Homedepot – Rubbermaid 48″ Track
Homedepot – Rubbermaid 9″ Shelf Bracket
Amazon – 3000K 90+ CRI LED Strip
Amazon – 6000K 90+ CRI LED Strip
Amazon – Meanwell 24V 10A PSU
Amazon – Touch Switch
Amazon – 12 Port Power Strip
Amazon – Cable Management Tray
Amazon – 22″ Monitor
Amazon – Wall Mounted Arm

Organization

The main appeal of my bench is the organization. I obsess over the little details and have spent a lot of time to organize every part of the bench. Organization is an ever going process though so it will never be done, it will just keep getting better.

Overview

Lets look at the organizational structure I have implemented. Everything is placed in a way that the most used things are the easiest to get to. Most frequent tools, instruments and components are out in the open. Less frequently used stuff is stored in drawers, bins and compartment boxes. I like to keep things consistent as much as possible since it makes storing them easier.

At this point, I would like to point out that you need a way to label things. Masking tape and a sharpie work great but you can get fancy with a label maker or label printer. I use them all based on what I am labelling and how permanent/important I expect it to be.

Bench Top

Lets start with the bench top. I have a main bin of tools that always holds a certain set of tools and based on what I am working on, will store additional tools as well. It serves as a quick way to stow away tools when not needed and easily retrieve them when needed.

The soldering iron and hot air rework station are to the right since I am right handed. They are quick to reach but also not in the way. Other things are lined up where they fit like the power supply, solder wire, USB charging station etc. I keep the left area clear so I can spread out my project further. I also usually keep a smaller bin to hold components I am actively using on the left.

Parts/Consumables Storage

There are 3 primary types of containers I use to store all my stuff:

  1. Small Drawers
  2. Compartment Boxes
  3. Bins

For the drawers, I use Akro-Mills drawers as they are decent quality and come in a variety of configurations. I use these to store electronic components. Most of the drawer space is taken by my tracked inventory of components for PCB designs. I also have other electronic components like relays, panel mount switches, magnets etc. in the drawers. They are all labelled and organized in a logical way so that similar stuff is together. For example all SMD components are grouped together.

I mainly use 2 types of compartment boxes. One is the clear 10.8x7x1.8″ box that is cheap and good for a variety of parts due to its modular compartments. I store connectors, hardware, modules and dev boards in these boxes. I usually buy kits of thing from Amazon and each comes in its own unique box so I have found it better to shift the parts to these standard boxes. They are much easier to store and navigate when you are looking for something. These are stacked on the second shelf. I also do have smaller compartment boxes for some of the smaller connectors. For example all JST SH connectors go in a small box. But I have tried to have a few different sizes and stick to those instead of having each connector be its own type of box. Initially, that can work but as you add more types of parts, it gets annoying. The smaller boxes are stored in the main drawers. There are some things like connectors which come in so many shapes, sizes and use cases that I find it best to store them appropriately in different containers and different locations. My more frequently used connectors are in the drawer next to me but the less frequent ones are in the larger compartment boxes.

The other type of box I use is the Aidetek SMD component storage box. I absolutely love these things and they amazing to store a large number of components in a small volume. I have all my frequently used components in these boxes and I keep them on the first shelf for quick access.

There is a lot of things that cant fit in either of the above two options so I use bins for those. Again, I have tried to use only two sizes so that its easy to store them and they look visually more aesthetic. The top shelf is taken by bins for larger things like tapes, adhesives etc. I have larger bins with parts in the closet that hold things I very rarely need to access.

Drawers

The drawers on both ends of my desk are used to store a variety of tools, parts and consumable supplies. But more importantly, I use small organizing containers to keep things inside the drawers fairly well organized. I use these ones for the shallow drawers and these for the deep ones.

The drawers I can access most easily are the top left two drawers and they hold more tools and soldering supplies. The top drawers on the right are unfortunately blocked by the soldering station wires so I keep things I use less frequently in those.

In the lower drawers, I keep more supplies and parts like wires, heat shrink, connectors etc.

Test Lead Holder

On the left edge of the shelves, I have a test lead holder that I use to hang all my test leads including oscilloscope leads, Minigrabber leads, alligator jumper cables etc. Not only does this keep them straight, it also keeps them untangled and ready to use.

Component Inventory System

I have more than a thousand different electric components for PCBs and trying to find which one I have became very time consuming. So I spent even more time coming up with an inventory system for the components. The system is based on Airtable and it stores entries for each component. It automatically generates a nice label that I can use to re-bag the components since they consume so much less space in my bags compared to what LCSC, Digikey etc. send them in. I also have automation scripts to add components into the database from CSV files.

I will go into much more depth on the inventory system in a separate post that I will link here when its up. There are a lot of details about the system I want to document and share.

Amazon – Brother Label Maker
Amazon – 15×6″ Bin
Amazon – Akro-Mils 24 Drawer Cabinet
Amazon – Akro-Mils 44 Drawer Cabinet
Amazon – Compartment Box 11x7x2″
Amazon – Aidetek Compartment Box
Amazon – 2″ Drawer Organizer Set
Amazon – 10x6x3″ Clear Bins
Amazon – Pomona Test Lead Holder

I have a used a lot of different tools, parts and supplies over the years. Slowly, I have moved towards the best balance of quality and value in each of these categories. In the following sections, I will go over my recommendation for things needed to get started. As you work on projects, you will add more stuff based on project specific needs. Links are provided to where you can buy everything. I have also added what I like about each item based on my personal experience using them.

Test Equipment

UNI-T UT61E Digital Multimeter

Much better value than a Fluke. Fast auto-ranging. All the features you would need including data-logging.

Amazon
Amazon – Serial Adapter

Probe Master 8000 Test Lead Kit

Gold plated. Silicon wires. Comfortable and ergonomic design.

Product Page

RD TC-66 USB-C Power Meter

Very nifty to test USB-C devices and power bricks. Works with all protocols.

Amazon

RD UM25 USB Power Meter

Very useful to quickly test USB power draw.

Amazon

RD RD6006PW Power Supply 60V 6A 360W

Much cheaper than alternatives. Precise enough for most applications. Very easy to use.

Amazon
Amazon – PSU
3D Printed Case

180W DC Electronic Load

Data logging ability over USB and Bluetooth. Much cheaper than fully built electronic loads. Great for PSU, USB and battery testing.

Amazon

Rigol DS1054Z Digital Oscilloscope

Great entry level scope for beginners. I have upgraded to a higher end model but I would recommend this when starting out.

Amazon

Pomona Minigrabber – Banana Jack Test Lead

High quality mini grabber leads to use with DMM, PSU or oscilloscope.

Amazon – 36″
Amazon – 24″

Prototyping Supplies

Bread Boards

Cant have an electronics lab without a bread board.

Amazon – Full
Amazon – Short

Bread Board Jumper Cables

These are much better quality than the cheap ones that come is a strip or the flimsy ones. Get the 10cm and 15cm in all configurations.

Amazon

Preformed Bread Board Jumper Wire Kit

Much stiffer than all others I have tried. Hold their shape well and go in easy.

Amazon

Soldering Tools

Hakko FX-888D Soldering Station

Get this once and never think about it again. Get special tips for specific use cases although be aware that thin tips don’t work very well.

Amazon

Engineer SS-02 Solder Sucker

The best sucker out there. Gets clogged easily what I have not been able to find anything better.

Amazon

Whizoo Reflow Oven


Available as a DIY kit so its double the fun. Works much better than the cheap ones out there.

Product Page

Yihua 959D-Digital Hot Air Rework Station

Best value for a hot air station. Its also much more compact than other models. Must buy if you plan to do SMD work.

Amazon

PCB Stickvise

Best PCB holding vise. Low profile makes working on the PCB easy.

Amazon
Amazon – PTFE Jaws

Omnifixo OF-M4

Small form factor and very versatile. Again, low profile to allow arms to rest on the bench for precise control.

Product Page

Tomlov DM402 Digital Microscope 10.1″

High quality image and large camera to base distance for easy working. Use power bank to make it portable.

Amazon
Amazon – Anker 10Ah Power Bank

Hakko Dual Solder Spool Holder

Heavy base and solid construction.

Amazon

Hand Tools

Knipex Side Cutter 5″

The single most used tool on the electronics bench. Way better than the Hakko. Get two.

Amazon

Xcelite Needle Nose Plier

Just the right size for electronics work. Not to tighten larger nuts.

Amazon

Wiha Screwdriver Set

Precise heads. Good grip. Very durable.

Amazon

Klein Wire Stripper 16-26 AWG

Strips well. Allows for precise manual control.

Amazon

Westcott Steel Ruler 12″

Cork anti slip base is great.

Amazon

Mitutoyo 6″ Digital Caliper

Buy once, cry once. Very reliable compared to cheaper alternatives

Amazon

Westcott 8-Inch Titanium Scissors 

Stiff construction. Quiet durable.

Amazon

X-ACTO #2 Precision Knife

Great for precise cutting or PCB trace cutting.

Amazon

OLFA 18mm Utility Knife

Well you need something to open all the Amazon packages with. Sharpest and most durable. Japanese.

Amazon
Amazon – Blades

Pentel Lead Pencil Kit

Best mechanical pencil out there.

Amazon

Sharpie Fine Point

Staple of any lab. Great for labelling stuff.

Amazon

Sharpie Ultra Fine Point

Great for labelling smaller stuff.

Amazon

LTT Screw Driver

Amazing ratcheting screw driver with integrated bit storage.

Product Page

Consumable Supplies

Soldering

Kester Sn63/Pb37 0.031″ Solder Wire

Amazon

Kester Sn63/Pb37 0.020″ Solder Wire

Amazon

NTE Electronics 0.098″ Solder Braid

Amazon

Chip Quik SMD291AX Solder Paste

Amazon

Chip Quik NC191-30CC Smooth Flow Tack Flux

Amazon

Heat Shrink

Heat Shrink Tubing Kit

Nothing special. I like the black ones compared to the multi-colored kits.

Amazon

Waterproof Heat Shrink Tubing Kit

Great for more rugged applications. Adhesive lined.

Amazon

These will get you through most applications but you can certainly buy them in different colors, higher quality and material based on your use case. I have accumulated a variety of tubing but use the aforementioned 99% of the time.

Wires

28 AWG Silicon Wire Kit

I use this the most often.

Amazon

22 AWG Silicon Wire Red/Black

Great for power connections.

Amazon

28 AWG Magnet Wire

Great for fixing mistakes you made in your PCB designs.

Amazon

My experience with silicon coated wires from Amazon has be great. They are not the best quality you can get but they are good enough for most prototyping applications. You can get them in any gauge and color combo your application demands. But don’t get PVC coated wires since they generally melt very easily and are poorly made. For those, you should turn to Digikey and be ready to pay a premium.

Tapes

Frog Painters Tape

Great for temporary taping of things like SMT stencils.

Amazon

Kapton Tape

High temperature resistance.

Amazon

3M VHB 5952 Double Sided Tape

The strongest double sided tape out there. The smaller rolls are mostly fakes and not as good.

Amazon

Scotch 2050 Masking Tape

Great for labelling stuff

Amazon

Adhesives

Gorilla Super Glue Gel

Amazon

Surebonder H-195F Hot Glue Gun

Amazon
Amazon – Glue Sticks

Cable Management

Velcro Cable Ties

Amazon

Zip Tie Kit

Amazon

Cells/Batteries

9V Batteries

Amazon

AA Cells

Amazon

AAA Cells

Amazon

CR2032

Amazon

Parts

Components

My electronic component inventory is massive with more than 1000 unique components. This inventory has built up over the course of many projects. I will write a separate blog post in which I will cover my curated list of components to get started with.

Fasteners

Having a variety of fastening hardware on hand helps to quickly prototype designs. The screws I use the most are course threaded screws that can thread into 3D printed plastic. I also have used threaded inserts and fine thread screws. While you can get screw kits from Amazon, the quality wont be particularly good. Hence I recommend getting them from McMaster-Carr.

Development Hardware

I have stocked up on a variety of development boards, modules and tools to quickly prototype ideas. The specific hardware that would be most useful for you would depend on the type of projects you want to tackle. Here are some things to keep in mind in your quest.

  • Adafruit has a large selection of high quality dev hardware. You cant go wrong with those.
  • Amazon has cheaper options but be careful about the quality as some might use fake components.
  • Don’t buy original Arduino boards. The clones are a much better value.

Below are some basic staples of my lab and some interesting tools I have found over the years. I will do a more detailed post with all my recommended development hardware later.

Arduino Nano

My go-to for simple projects that require a microcontroller.

Amazon

Arduino Mega

If I need lots of I/O.

Amazon

ESP32-WROOM-32D Dev Board

Powerful and cheap dev board with WiFi. Great for general things due to low cost and feature set. Check other Espressif products for specific needs.

Amazon
ESP Product Selector

nRF52840 Feather Board

Best for BLE development. Explore other nordic products as well.

Adafruit

Nordic Power Profiler 2

Great tools to measure power consumption of low power electronics.

Product Page
Digikey

Miscellaneous

Rubber Feet

Great to keep things in place.

Amazon – Black
Amazon – Clear

Neodymium Magnet

Magnets are very cool and I love to integrate them in my designs.

Amazon

1oz Stick-on Wheel Weights

Great option to weight down things and prevent them from moving or tipping over too easily.

Amazon

Computer Workstation

While most of the hardware work is done on the lab bench, all of my programming work is done on the computer workstation. It is the perfect complement to the lab bench and allows me all the room, screen real estate and power to test and program anything I want.

The desktop PC is a custom built unit with decent specifications. It easily handles anything I can throw at it. It has the following components.

  1. Corsair 4000D Mid-Tower ATX Case (Amazon)
  2. Corsair RM750x 750 Watt Modular Power Supply (Amazon)
  3. Ryzen 9 5900X CPU (Amazon)
  4. MSI B550 MS-7C91 Tomahawk Motherboard (Amazon)
  5. 64GB Corsair Vengence Dominator Platinum DDR4 Memory (Amazon)
  6. Samsung 970 EVO Plus SSD 2TB (Amazon)
  7. MSI GeForce RTX 3080 10GB GDRR6X GPU
    • RTX 4080 is a much better deal today (Amazon)
  8. Corsair H100i AIO Cooler
  9. Noctua NF-F12 Fan (Amazon)
  10. High Gain WiFi Bluetooth Antenna (Amazon)

The triple monitor setup just cant be beat for both productivity and entertainment. Coupled with high quality peripherals, makes the setup very comfortable and effective. Following are things that make up this setup.

  1. LG UltraGear QHD 27-Inch Gaming Monitor 27GL850-B (Amazon)
  2. Echogear Triple Monitor Stand (Amazon)
  3. Logitech MX Keys Keyboard (Amazon)
  4. Logitech MX Master 3 Mouse (Amazon)
  5. LTT Northern Light Desk Pad 1000x400mm (Product Page)
  6. LTT 21oz Water Bottle (Product Page)
  7. Anker Charging Station (Amazon)
  8. Logitech C922 HD Webcam (Amazon)
  9. Creative Pebble Desktop Speakers (Amazon)
  10. 12-Port Power Strip (Amazon)
  11. Under Desk Cable Management Tray (Amazon)
  12. Cable Management Organizer Kit (Amazon)
  13. Velcro Cable Ties (Amazon)

I use the following furniture elements for the setup.

  1. Alex Drawer Chest (Ikea)
  2. Gerton Table Top (Discontinued)
    • Alternative Bekant Table Top 63×31″ (Ikea)
  3. Adil Table Legs (Ikea)
  4. Steelcase Think Fabric Chair (Discontinued)
    • Alternative Steelcase Series 2 Chair (Amazon)

Most of the time, the desk looks like this and is filled with prototypes and parts of the current project I am working on.

3D Printer

A 3D printer is a very useful and powerful tool to have. Not only can you use it to optimize your lab but you can also prototype enclosures and mechanisms for your designs. There are too many options out there and the best option for you will be based on what is it that you are looking for. You can get cheaper units that can do basic printing well and might require a bit more attention and care. Or you could go for higher end units that just work and require minimal tinkering.

I have found the Ender 3 Pro with some basic upgrades to be a great value for money and the best place to get started with. Once you feel like you need a more capable printer because you need to print an engineering material or print larger quantity, you can invest in a higher end model.

Following are links to the printer and recommended upgrade parts.

Conclusion

I hope this guide will provide some inspiration for you to spice up your setup. Let me know if you have any questions. Pleaseany recommendations for products you have found useful around the lab.

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