The silicone mat is very temperature resistant. It can handle the heat of an iron or hot air station.I am not sure how dissipative are the silicones stated they are?
Why not having permanently a dissipative mat on the workbench?

IE No burn scars on the table top from solder drips etc. Plus I like the resilient and soft surface texture as it helps reduce dropped parts scatter. The color is easy on the eyes and helps to find parts. I use the S-130 35x25 cm mat, but thinking I may get a slightly larger one that actually is ESD. I wash/wipe it from time to time to get rid of coffee stains and such.The silicone mat is very temperature resistant. It can handle the heat of an iron or hot air station.
They interfere with my work since the surface is not stable, nor flat.I know the mats, even the heat resistance ones cannot stand high temperatures. If you leave solder iron for a minute are destroyed. This is a problem.
But mats are consumables, not for a life
I only use my mat when it'll make a difference. My mat is larger than my workspace, so I'm more likely to ground myself before manipulating static sensitive parts, or use anti-static tweezers.I haven't seen on your workbenches any ESD protection, mats etc. I am not talking of NASA prerequisites, i.e. antistatic workbenches. Just an antistatic mat.
Isn't needed? I think it is
I feel your pain. So much so that I'm actually building a new shelving system to manage parts in a compact way nobody has done. It will let me store parts cabinets in a fraction of their current space while still being easily accessible.For the moment, I am constrained to setting up my bench on a 4' x 30" table. I've been trying to maximize the use of the space. I just added a dual arm with metal shelves to hold scope, AWG, and multimeter, and while it isn't rock solid, it works very well. The addition of a small cart with drawers makes it pretty usable.
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Have you got any tips, hints, or ideas about compact benches? I am still optimizing and I'd love to benefit from the experience of AAC.

