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Hex insert strap winder

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astroracer

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Jun 22, 2005
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Mid_Michigan
Simple to make... A piece of 1/8th" x 3/8th's or 1/2" wide steel. Bent in a U with a piece of 1/4" rod welded to it. Probably take 15 minutes to build one... :)
Mark
 

astroracer

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I doubt the hex driver is really a requirement. A piece of 1/4" diameter rod will do the same thing. Drill bits have been round forever and they work fine. This winder thing should never see enough "torque" that a round mandrel will spin in the chuck.
Makr
 

jayrush13

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Dec 30, 2006
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340
Location
Lebanon Oregon
I doubt the hex driver is really a requirement. A piece of 1/4" diameter rod will do the same thing. Drill bits have been round forever and they work fine. This winder thing should never see enough "torque" that a round mandrel will spin in the chuck.
Makr

But the hex driver would let you put it in an impact or one of the m12 screwdriver
 

racingtadpole

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Dec 3, 2011
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The far side of crazy.. but sometimes Australia
I doubt the hex driver is really a requirement. A piece of 1/4" diameter rod will do the same thing. Drill bits have been round forever and they work fine. This winder thing should never see enough "torque" that a round mandrel will spin in the chuck.
Makr

Its not about torque, its about being able to use it in 4 tools instead of just 1.
 
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Brian_WK

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Jun 30, 2015
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NE South Dakota
Wouldn't work for fastjohnny as he is looking for a all metal finished look. But why not use a cheap 1/4inch shank bit and a piece of wood or plastic dowel with a slot cut in it and drill a hole and glue the hex bit in?

Brian
 

sb7979

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Oct 29, 2012
Messages
112
Location
NW Ohio
I ordered enough material from McMaster Carr to make two of these. Will cost about $15 total for two.

Using Stuart's suggestion of a turnbuckle....that's what it looked like to me as well when I first glanced at it.

It will just have a round shaft, not 1/4" hex.

Going to use one of these turnbuckles, cut one end off, thread and weld a partially threaded rod into it. Done.

Not sure of the scale, maybe it's too small of a turnbuckle, we'll see.

2995t140l.gif
 
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fastjohnny

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Sep 3, 2011
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SW Michigan

sb7979

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Oct 29, 2012
Messages
112
Location
NW Ohio
Before and after pic. Literally took 5 minutes to make. If you only spin in clockwise direction you wouldn't even have to tack weld the stud in.

I used it to roll up some 1 1/2" flat discharge hose. Worked perfect.

 
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joe--h

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Jan 30, 2013
Messages
536
After looking at McMaster, I ordered 2 turnbuckles off Ebay. I chose that over the above as the turnbuckle had a machined taper rather than machined hex at the ends. I'm planning to not cut the end off, just slice through it with a cut off wheel. On the fence whether I'll loctite in a 1/4-20 threaded rod or weld in a 1/4" hex bit.

http://www.ebay.com/itm/281978019534?_trksid=p2057872.m2749.l2649&ssPageName=STRK:MEBIDX:IT

That same turnbuckle is $2 at Home Depot.

Joe H
 

bad_idea

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Jun 11, 2011
Messages
4,335
Location
Pasquotank, NC
I made one a few years ago for a friend who drives truck. bent a piece of round stock into a u and then welded a piece to the middle of the u. took 10 minutes to make and he loved it.
 
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fastjohnny

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Sep 3, 2011
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Location
SW Michigan
Finished project today, need to get a pic. The turnbuckle turned out to be aluminum, so I used epoxy to attache the hex bit. Worked great.
 
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