chim
Elite Member
The top on my table is 36x48 and the casters are 28" CTC, and it's 37" high. I did a mockup first with longer legs and shortened it to a comfortable-for-me 37". Quality of life has improved greatly with completion of the table. I've often complained that although I love working on projects, till now the welding was done on sawhorses with a piece of plywood or while crawling around on the blacktop.
It is easy to roll in and out of the garage, and there's about a 1" difference between the concrete and the blacktop. It isn't tippy at all, but it only rolls on the long dimension. I threw a 6' scraper blade on it for repairs and rotated the vise so the blade could rest on the table and stay upright. A project last week involved clamping a 5' piece of 4x6x3/8 galvanized angle in the vise.
The floor jacks are inboard of the casters. I used fixed casters on one end and swivel on the other. The table is easily maneuvered and with the floor jacks on the end with the swivel casters it stays put when I set the jacks. I figured if there were swivels on all four, the table would move sideways on the one end unless there were four jacks
It is easy to roll in and out of the garage, and there's about a 1" difference between the concrete and the blacktop. It isn't tippy at all, but it only rolls on the long dimension. I threw a 6' scraper blade on it for repairs and rotated the vise so the blade could rest on the table and stay upright. A project last week involved clamping a 5' piece of 4x6x3/8 galvanized angle in the vise.
The floor jacks are inboard of the casters. I used fixed casters on one end and swivel on the other. The table is easily maneuvered and with the floor jacks on the end with the swivel casters it stays put when I set the jacks. I figured if there were swivels on all four, the table would move sideways on the one end unless there were four jacks