Container Weld Shop build -

   / Container Weld Shop build - #101  
Sounds like a plan, mark - maybe you can find one of those "wheelie" bags that'll take a conversion to 13" tires, easier to pull when weight tops 50 lbs :D - one caveat on the calipers, you've probably already discovered - even the better ones seem to eat batteries if you leave 'em in, near as I can tell they are NEVER actually "off". I've had the HF ones AND the iGaging ones be dead if I haven't used 'em in a while. My work-around is just to pull the battery if I'm not gonna be using 'em for a few days, + I now STOCK the 2032 cells, LR44's, 357's and a couple others my stuff uses.

The upside on that iGaging - they were nice enough to make the battery fit into a little "mini-drawer", so you can slide the whole thing out and just leave it in the case with the caliper. I find it easier to turn the display AWAY from me and use a fingernail to pull the drawer, this puts the battery on TOP of the "drawer" so it doesn't automatically fall out and roll someplace you weren't looking :confused: ...Steve
Ya know, those wheelie bags are probably the right way to go long term! Gonna have to go check out those Husky brand bags. There seems to be a lot of choices. I bought a couple simple ones as gifts in the past but never thought too hard about functionality.

I've been using a crusty old duffle bag with no pockets and a busted zipper acquired somehow... memory faded. Also have a too little Dewalt tote bag that came with a 20v cordless kit. Neither works as I am having to dig through the pile to find the right tool. Also no place for screws, bits, and other small tools. Time for the upgrade.
 
   / Container Weld Shop build - #103  
I needed to communicate with everybody from the production helper who wasn't sure which side of a pallet the forks went into,<<<<<<That describes me right to a TTTT, and Steve thanks for that link on that caliber thing, that might help me with some of my measurement issues.
 
   / Container Weld Shop build -
  • Thread Starter
#104  
You're entirely welcome; and I'm pretty sure that WILL help. The trouble with calculators (and slide rules, before that) is you kinda had to ALREADY KNOW (close, anyway) what the answer was, and how to get it - but using a digital caliper like the one in the link, you can actually physically MEASURE the thing you wanna know about, then push that middle button and it'll TELL you 2 other ways to describe it. (decimal inches, and millimeters)

Didn't get ANYTHING done on the subject of THIS thread today, instead I picked up a FREE laboratory oven (sold new for over $5,000) - doesn't work right now, but I spent the last 34 years fixing stuff exactly like this (and I have at least 3 "slightly used" controllers that'll slip right in where the (maybe bad) one is.

Thermolyne Oven 9 - free stuff

The thing LOOKS brand new, that model goes up to 250 degrees C (482 degrees F) which is plenty warm enough for powder coating, also just curing other paint. (It'll also keep me alive better than even THINKING about using Mrs. Bukit's MUCH-revered double oven stove :eek:)

If by some UNLIKELY chance I CAN'T fix it, I can always just stick a light bulb in it and use it for storing stuff I don't want dusty/musty/rusty; but from the lab tech's description, it'll probly be working by the time I've played with it for an hour or two.

That'll hafta come later tho, gotta get the weld cart wrapped up/painted/outa my face so I can move on... Steve
 
   / Container Weld Shop build -
  • Thread Starter
#105  
Finally got back to it - pieces for welder front lip and aux. shelf, clamped - DSCN3028.JPGDSCN3029.JPGDSCN3030.JPGDSCN3031.JPGDSCN3032.JPGDSCN3033.JPG -

Welded - DSCN3034.JPGDSCN3035.JPGDSCN3036.JPG - rear view - DSCN3037.JPG -
 
   / Container Weld Shop build -
  • Thread Starter
#106  
And the (tastefully restrained :D) nozzle gel, with room for temporary accessories (small ones, that is :thumbsup:) DSCN3038.JPG

FYI - the "restraints" will let me R&R the lid WITHOUT having to set the gun down - otherwise, that jar takes two hands to open... Steve
 
   / Container Weld Shop build - #107  
And the (tastefully restrained :D) nozzle gel, with room for temporary accessories (small ones, that is :thumbsup:) View attachment 534720

FYI - the "restraints" will let me R&R the lid WITHOUT having to set the gun down - otherwise, that jar takes two hands to open... Steve

Or if you ever get tired of smelling the jelly and the mess it could make, AND if you ever do get to alot of welding, this stuff works great and smells great, the applicator is sold separate, it's a little pricey, but with Trumps new tax break you can now afford it>>> E-WELD Nozzle - YouTube
 
   / Container Weld Shop build -
  • Thread Starter
#108  
Near as I can tell, I'm too rich to be poor and too poor to be rich so Trump's no help; still glad he kicked the Hildebeast's ***** tho -

At $34 a 12 oz can, think I'll stick to $6 for the gel - took me right at 3 YEARS to go thru a 44# spool of L56, somehow I don't think that puts me in the "volume user" category :laughing:

Been a few degrees too cool here for paint, so I'm figuring out a portable paint booth (4x4x8) out of 1" foam board insulation - that part's easy, but I also want a way to put a rack in it so I can hang several smaller pieces in there to cure - just a small bathroom heater inside overnight will keep things above the 50* minimum my paint wants.

I probably got something stashed somewhere that'd double as a rack, hopefully big enough to work and small enough to fit in a 4x4 footprint... Steve
 
   / Container Weld Shop build - #109  
Steve, I am very interested in your paint booth concept! Please follow up. Mine consists of temp hanging of old bed sheets and the lighting and ventilation is an issue. It is portable though. :D
 
   / Container Weld Shop build -
  • Thread Starter
#110  
Mark, right now it's just a notch above "brain fart" status - I have 5 sheets of 1" foam board, 4x8 feet (bought for another project, things changed :rolleyes:) - I'm thinking cut one sheet into 2 4x4's - use 3 full sheets and both halves for 8' long, 4hx4w or 4 full sheets and ONE half for 4x4x8' tall (the way it'll be for the first use) -

Probably duct tape all the edges for a little better wear, thinking about some self-stick velchro in a few places to hold the sheets closed. Stiff enough to self-support (out of the wind, that is :D)

Leave one side open while painting (foil side in, 1 or 2 lights should reflect enough to see) - Close it up with small heater to preheat parts, open one side, "let us spray", close it up with heater, dry by morning.

Pop the velchro off and store flat, should take up about 6" x 4' of storage floor space.

I have 2 different hanger scenarios - for the upright version, I have an old thrift shop find - a base, upright with height adjusting holes every 6" or so, upper piece has a tee out of slightly bigger than 5/8" rod - cross piece is about 3' long and sturdy enough to hold a couple steel pieces each side, at least 100 lbs total maybe more. goes to about 5' high.

For heavier things (like the main frame on the "eternal weld cart") I can hang 'em from my "mini-jib" and use BOTH half-sheets for a lid, one on each side of the winch cable. If they're too tall for that, I have a 1 ton chain hoist hanging from one of the cross pieces in the "porta-shed" I built; 12'x12', roof is 9' to 11' height, hoist is about 9' to the max lift point.

For the horizontal mode (more pieces but not as tall) I have a few sticks of unistrut and TONS of angles, spring nuts, pipe clamps, etc, (a CL deal, $100 for about $250 worth of strut and about 250# of fittings, total worth around $2k)) so a few minutes with a couple wrenches and a rattle gun and it's a done deal.

I buy 3/16" gas welding rod at my LWS (used to get 1/4" too, no longer available) I call that stuff my "mil-spec coat hanger", use it for all kinds of band-aids that're too much for mechanic's wire - in this case, I'll make up a bunch of hanger hooks; they'll fit either the solid rod on my thrift store hanger or thru the holes in the unistrut. Even the 1/8" weld rod will support at least 50 pounds per hook.

OK, maybe SOME of that "brain fart" had some solids in it :laughing: ... Steve
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2013 VERMEER RTX1250 RIDE ON TRACTOR (A51242)
2013 VERMEER...
2019 Chevrolet Silverado 1500 4x4 Crew Cab Pickup Truck (A50323)
2019 Chevrolet...
2025 Swict 78in Bucket Skid Steer Attachment (A50322)
2025 Swict 78in...
2020 John Deere 35G Mini Excavator (A49461)
2020 John Deere...
2012 CATERPILLAR 259B3 SKID STEER (A51242)
2012 CATERPILLAR...
AMCO F42B-3626CS 13ft Pull-Behind Wheel Offset Harrow Tiller (A49461)
AMCO F42B-3626CS...
 
Top