Smithing Table

A smithing table is a toolsmith's job site block that generates in villages, and can be used to upgrade diamond gear into netherite gear.

Obtaining
Smithing tables are able to be obtained from a village or crafting.

Natural generation
Smithing tables can spawn naturally inside toolsmith houses in villages.

Breaking
Smithing tables can be broken by hand, but using an axe speeds up the process.

Usage
Smithing tables can be used only to upgrade diamond tools and armor to netherite. Smithing tables also do not affect NBT data of items.

Change profession
If a village contains a smithing table that has not been claimed by a villager, any villager who hasn't already chosen a job site block has a chance to change their profession to toolsmith. If a villager with this profession has already been traded with, it cannot change jobs.

Fuel
Smithing tables can be used as a fuel in furnaces, smelting 1.5 items per block.

Upgrading To Netherite
Smithing tables can be used to upgrade diamond gear to netherite.

While doing so, the newly crafted netherite gear retains the enchantments, prior work penalty and number of durability points lost (instead of the remaining durability) from the diamond gear.

Upgrading gear does not remove incompatible enchantments, such as multiple different Protection enchantments.

Unlike anvils, using a smithing table to upgrade diamond gear to netherite gear costs no experience and does not increase the prior work penalty.

Smithing table recipes use the data pack system.

Note Blocks
Smithing tables can be placed under note blocks to produce "bass" sound.

ID




Trivia

 * Like with the crafting table, none of the tools seen on the side of the smithing table are real tools in-game.
 * Smithing tables are the only crafting station in the game that can craft only one specific type of item.
 * In Bedrock Edition, the Classic Textures resource pack uses the first smithing table (or at least the top) texture from Beta 1.9.0.2.
 * Smithing Tables are one of the few wood-based blocks that don't resemble any of the 8 existing wood-types, with the others being chests, trapped chests, note blocks, jukeboxes and composters.