That is awesome! How do you empty it?
I was originally going to weld a bung to the bottom, but I decided instead that I can just pump it out. I think it will take more than a year or even two years to fill up to the holes on the front.
That is awesome! How do you empty it?
I did, but is seemed to be a wash as the tape would pull off chips too.
I am sure it is mainly because I don't have a dedicated melamine blade, which I might try for the next one. The plan is to run these all the way down the wall.
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Here's a new Dewalt charger bracket I made and a gang charger for the new tools at work.

Strut is amazing stuff. The next time you go into an industrial building (or even a big box store, like Home Depot), take a look on the walls and ceilings. There is lots and lots of things secured to the walls with strut. It also has a very high point load rating, so it is used to support heavy objects between beams and other roof support structures. It is built specifically to work with threaded rod too, so you can clamp the threaded rod to the support in the ceiling and drop down to any level with strut.
There are several standard sizes. I get the 1200 at Home Depot (which I think means 12 gauge steel, 0.1" thick, 2.5mm), for about $20 a 10-ft stick (3 meters). I'm pretty sure it is available in 20-foot sticks (6 meters), from commercial distributors (plumbing, electrical, etc.)
I've been using it for several years in my shop, which is covered well in my main thread (see my signature for a link). You can REALLY crank down on the bolts in this stuff...it isn't going anywhere. I cannot imagine it 'getting loose.' There isn't any real vibration in a building and this stuff is used EVERYWHERE to suspend heavy loads overhead. The strut is not the weak part in this system.
Strut is amazing stuff.

If you can find a good source of different Strut accessories, that stuff is like Legos for grown men. You can build, mount, or support just about anything with the right fittings and brackets.

That's awesome! Thanks for sharing punk. I love unistrut. But the tv mount idea, that's awesome... Is that just a std tv mount attached to the unistrut bolt? That's awesome. There are so many things I never thought to use it for
If you can find a good source of different Strut accessories, that stuff is like Legos for grown men. You can build, mount, or support just about anything with the right fittings and brackets.
Any electrical supply store should have most anything you would need.
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I slapped this together with some scrap wood just as a temporary way to keep my drills organized while I'm getting settled in to the garage at my new house. I intentionally made the lower shelf hard to get in toso that dust and sparks would stay off my eyeglasses, cell phone, etc. I also wanted enough room to comfortably get to the belts on that drill press.
I slapped this together with some scrap wood just as a temporary way to keep my drills organized while I'm getting settled in to the garage at my new house. I intentionally made the lower shelf hard to get in toso that dust and sparks would stay off my eyeglasses, cell phone, etc. I also wanted enough room to comfortably get to the belts on that drill press.
Is that squirrel cage fan set up to push air from inside the shop towards the outside? I've got a couple I'm going to rig up for moving air around within the shop and was considering setting one up as an external vent.
I did the same PVC trick for nearly all my corded and cordless tools..best way to store them
There's so much going on in this photo... where are the rest of the stairs... whats with the ginormous Ghostbusters sign? The randomness of the puppy...
Nice place


I love bikes, but they sure take up a lot of space and without kick stands they block whatever tool box they are leaned against or fall on the floor.
Do this:
1. Screw 2 big hooks into ceiling
2. Add pulley to ceiling
3. Run rope with hook around bike tube
4. Pull it up and away!
Still 8 ft to bottom of bikes. I do have to sorta hold the front tire as it rotates up, but works great.
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