Showing posts with label Welding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Welding. Show all posts

Saturday, June 1, 2013

Welding Table - In The Event You Build One Or Purchase One?

One of the first welding projects you need to tackle is really a welding table. Hold on one minute. Are you certain you need to take the time and cash to construct a welding table whenever you might have the ability to purchase one that's portable, collapsible, and affordable? I'm all to make things myself after i can help to save $ 1. Nevertheless its depressing whenever you spend a weekend fighting having a welding project simply to realize you might have just bought the one thing and spent your time and effort on the better project.

Allows look a some options to ensure that might help in making a a great decision on welding tables, from least expensive and simplest, to more costly and multi functional.

3 choices for an easy duty table:

A 30" x 20" collapsible metal table that's created for welding which collapses for storage, can be purchased available away from the box. Approximate cost around 0 plus shipping. The least expensive and simplest might really be some homemade sawhorses using sawhorse brackets together with a bit of 11 gauge steel for that welding desktop. If not being used, the metal could be saved against a wall and also the sawhorses could be taken apart and saved taken care of. You can even laminate a bit of 16 ga sheet to some small sheet of threeOr4 inch plywood should you wanted. This could serve inside a pinch like a light duty table for welding small parts. Approximate cost around Eighty Dollars ( Twenty Dollars for sawhorse brackets for any half sheet of plywood, for 2 by fours, for sheet metal top.) A stainless-steel food table can be purchased that may be put together rapidly. (Should you weld stainless food service type parts, a great option because you wouldn't want stainless getting contaminated with iron contaminants which will later cause rust and discoloration.) Approximate cost around 0
2 choices for huge duty table:

Purchase a full sheet of just oneOr2" 1 / 2 inch or ¾" steel plate together with some 3 inch square tubing or position iron and fabricate an excellent durable welding table that may be hammered on, heated, welded to, held to, etc. Approximate cost for that all of the steel is about 0 Buy a durable welding table created using 6 individual precision ground steel plates which are CNC-machined with 5/8in. holes inside a 2in. power grid pattern that will you to definitely clamp virtually anything associated with a shape. Price is around 00 plus shipping.

Friday, May 10, 2013

How you can A Build Welding Table

It is an accepted fact that welding is a risky operation and finding a safe workspace that can withstand the high heat of welding can be difficult. Welding operators who do not find suitable floor space or feel uncomfortable working on the floor may build their own convenient welding tables.

There are many different ways to design a welding table but the design must be such that it is cost-effective and also provide working comfort to the welding operator.

The biggest cost component in the making of any welding table is the thick steel top. But a 1.6mm gauge sheet metal on top of marine ply should suffice. This relatively thin sheet metal is more to protect the top of the ply wood from all possible spatter and hot sparks that emanate during the welding operations.

The ideal height of a welding table is 900mm high and this height would be right for all welding operators. It will be helpful to fit castor wheels to the bottom of the legs for easy movement of the welding table inside the workshop.

Materials needed to construct a welding table:

* Metal top of 1.6mm sheet metal to size 832x1195mm for use as table top surface
* Marine ply or some similar flat wood for table top, of the same size as the sheet metal
* Legs are 40x40x3mm box section
* Castor wheels - 4 nos.
* Iron angle for the underside of the table preferably 40x40x4mm
* Mesh for shelf beneath the table top
* Iron angle to size 25x25x3mm for using around the top ply edges
* Small length of 5mm diameter rod of half meter length

Procedure to construct the welding table:

* Cut down the marine ply to match the size of the sheet metal top. Chop up some angle iron that will be welded up so that it can be bolted to the underside of the wooded table top. Cut two angle irons to 632mm length and two other 995mm length and these will make up the underside frame of the table top.

* Lay out your four bits of angle on the workshop floor. All the cuts have to be at right angles. You will need to cut them at 45 degrees so that when you weld them together, the height will be flush. On the particular abrasive chop saw loosen the two bolts and adjust the angle to 45 degrees. Once that is done, trim the ends at 45 degrees.

* Get the angle grinder and clean up the cuts and make them fine and smooth so that when the pieces are butted together, there will not have any problems. Lay out the four pieces again and tack-weld them together.

* Once the four corners are tack welded you will need to check the whole thing for square and flatness. Check the corners with a square to make sure that they are at perfect right angles.

* Next, grind down the weld beads on the top flat angle surface. Some holes will have to be drilled around the frame to facilitate screwing the timber top to the bench.

* Now make up the shelf frame to consist of four pieces of the 40x40x3mm box section steel welded into a rectangle of the same dimensions of the top frame. Finish them off with a grinder to get the burrs and metal shavings off the cut face. Go to clamp and weld the frame up.

* Lay out your four lengths of steel and tack-weld them in all four corners four times. This frame should not be fully welded as the legs have to sit on top of and underneath it. So leave the four tack welds in each corner and just grind them down.

* Cut to length four pieces of box at 500mm long. These will be welded onto the frame that that was just made. Next, you will tack weld the angle iron frame to the top of these legs.

* ake some mesh and cut it out to fit on top of the shelf frame. Chop the corners out of the mesh so that the legs can be welded on. The bottom legs will now need to be cut out. Again out of 40x40x3mm box. Only tack welds for now.

* Weld the mesh into its place. The mesh once welded will hold the frame tightly. If everything is perfect and hold square, weld it all up. A few small tack welds for each castor wheel should see them holding on tight. Get hold of the angle grinder and use the wire brush and go over the whole frame work of the welding table.

* Use an angle iron frame to go around the edge of the marine ply top to protect the edge of the wood, and also to make it look more aesthetic. Tack-weld the top sheet of steel in a few places to the angle iron edge and do the vertical down welds for the edges of the angle iron.