This is my workbench. It's a modified Milwaukee 40" Mobile work bench with wood top. It lets me do accurate work in a tiny 1.8 x 2.2 meter ( 6 x 7 foot ) workshop.
The holes are 20mm wide and spaced 96mm apart like a Festool MFT. This allows me to accurately position bench-dogs that I use to align my fence and track saw guide rail at 90° to one another. These can be removed and re-added to the bench and will maintain their position without needing re-alignment.
The bench-top has 1/2” 14° dovetail slots to work with the Microjig Matchfit system. These allow me to clamp at any point along the slot line. Traditional bench-dog workbenches and MFT style benches leave empty space beneath the bench-top to allow clamps to be fed through the holes. The slots in my bench-top allow me to use that space for drawers.
I can do a 430mm ( 17 inch ) crosscut in its normal configuration. The fence and dogs can be rotated 90° to allow for crosscuts up to 820mm (32 inch ). The fence comes in 4 segments, though I normally only use 3. Fully assembled it is 1190mm ( 47 inch ). I use the measurements on the fence to position flag stops for repeatable cuts.
The small non-dovetail slot you may have noticed is where my blade extends past the workpiece into the bench. This slot is re-used because the guide rail is always in the same position. If I need to make a rip cut I put a 12mm (1/2 inch) plywood board underneath the workpiece.
My workshop has no power outlets and I work with the doors closed to reduce dust and noise getting into the apartment. As a result all of my tools are battery powered. The track saw hooked up to a Milwaukee M18 Wet/Dry Vacuum means that most cuts produce next to no dust.
The Milwaukee M18 Compact Router is normally quite good with dust collection. Though the plunge base works less well. The router can connect to the Festool rail using a 3d printed adaptor from Etsy. The rail is clamped to the bench-top using Matchfit clamps that I ground down slightly so that they fit the rail's t-slot. I leave the bench-top free floating so that it can protrude off the edge of the cabinet if needed.
I use the same dovetail slot in a plywood sheet that I've attached to the side of the cabinet. This allows me to clamp pieces vertically. It serves as an alternative to a traditional bench vice. Just one slot lets me clamp quite wide parts, even ones of uneven thickness. I will add more slots further down that will let me clamp tall parts more like a leg vice.
The slots on the top also see a lot of use holding jigs, or pieces being drilled, and during glue ups.