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Got tired of tripping over an old heavy diamond plate man hole cover I had in my shop so I cut it up and with some free 1/4" wall square tubing I made a nice super heavy duty stand for my Baldor grinder/belt sander/polisher. Only took a couple hours to make and paint with POR-15 and it's been a life saver.
 
tight on space... my workshop is a 11.5' by 20' carriage house, with 4 or 5 motorcycles in there at any given time, sometimes a Model A project, misc. little projects, etc...

... given that tight space, i gotta make things compact and multi purpose.

belt sander / bandsaw combination:
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it's just a pipe welded to an old rim... super stable, free and easily movable.
welded a mounting plate for the belt sander that came from a garage sale ($5)
another mounting plate for the tote-saw that came from a garage sale ($6)
big ass 1/2 hp motor that came from a garage sale ($10)
put a switch in a j-box (leftover free stuff)

$21 later i've got a damn serious sander and a bandsaw that's awesome for small/detail work (and no off-the-shelf blades are made for it so i've gotta buy in bulk and cut/weld them)

and not a tool, not really home made... but found some cool shelf brackets and a 2x4, mounted a top box up on the wall out of the way:

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Re-purposed shovel clutch plate...

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Spark Plug tool, points cleaner, plug gapper, plug cleaner, Allen wrench, Flat head carb adjustment tool, mini hammer, shank, bottle opener, file, brake nipple bleeder, and a couple of random wrench sizes.

I love this thing and it has gotten me off the side of the road a couple of times.

 
I really like what you've done with the saw. Unfortunately, I don't even have any wall space available at this point.

If you keep stealing road signs, people aren't going to know where to drive and bedlam will surely ensue. Possibly chaos and maybe even mayhem. What about the children?
 
Nice work Dan!
That is a handy tool.

I built a similar one years ago and it's still in service and working fine. It's handy as hell for building wheels too. All you need is to clamp a stiff piece of wire (tig rod) to one of the side supports to use as an indicator for truing rims. Or, if you have one, you can get real fancy and use a dial indicator with a magnetic base.

Geo.
 
Nice work Dan!
That is a handy tool.

I built a similar one years ago and it's still in service and working fine. It's handy as hell for building wheels too. All you need is to clamp a stiff piece of wire (tig rod) to one of the side supports to use as an indicator for truing rims. Or, if you have one, you can get real fancy and use a dial indicator with a magnetic base.

Geo.
Good point, I never thought about building wheels on it I usually do that in the frame but this will work well.

Cheers Dan.
 
I wanted something to use when i build rims for cars and/or to use for polishing or sanding rims and other stuff that don't fit in my lathe,so a used 3 oiece chuck or,,,erm whats it called?? and some ideas later and it's allmost done,need the killswitch and a few meters of cable then it's all ready to go :)

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for sure,a bit confusing as i clamped the chuck in the benchvise and that it's blue and the rest is red(ish) :)

//Janne
 
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