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Upgrades for a HF A frame press

Darby9

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2020
Messages
110
Location
San Francisco
Please don't tell anybody but I went to THAT store in an emergency and bought the worst hydraulic press possible. I needed a press for a very last minute job, don't have room for a big one, and they sold me the floor model, missing a handle, pins, and press plates, for $50 because they pitied me (discontinued model, website claimed it was in-stock, drive 90 minutes, didn't have any...).

It did the job to emboss some copper parts, customer is happy, job paid $1600. Everybody wins.

Now, what to do with it? It's all kinds of crooked and I've never seen an "A frame" design. Six ton capability, fits under the workbench w/o taking it apart. Can I ditch the A frame top and make a regular square one from steel channel (maybe reinforce this one?), or is there something special/beneficial to that design? Looks like a cost shortcut to me, but I'm judgey.

I usually have access to heavier presses, so this is mostly for stamping/embossing/bending copper and aluminum sheet. I do prototype runs of 50-100's of parts at a time, so I'll add some fixture plate system to locate parts repeatably, plus a handle on the release valve.

IMG_2619.jpg
 
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GeoBruin

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Joined
May 5, 2018
Messages
3,750
The jack is pushing just as hard on the top of the frame as it is on the bottom, so either the top needs to be just as beefy, or it needs to be a shorter span. By being shorter, it can use less material and is lighter which certainly does have a cost savings but also makes it lighter and more compact which has advantages.

You could rebuild it but it wouldn't offer any advantage that I can see. The work area would remain the same unless you chose to increase the spacing between the uprights but then you would likely need to reinforce the bottom crossmember and you just ending up starting from scratch.

I would leave it and either sell it if you really need a bigger press or if it works for what you're doing and it stores out of the way, keep it and make the single best update possible which is to swap the jack with an air hydraulic jack. If you're making 50 to 100 of something, the time saved will pay you back almost instantly.

Harbor Freight sells those too...

Good luck.
 

bwringer

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Joined
Jan 1, 2013
Messages
10,318
Location
Indianapolis
Good gravy, you can see the wonky from outer space.

Still, turd-polishing can be kinda fun, in a sick way...

HF's smallest air-powered bottle jack is 12 tons. Would it even fit into this one? You could probably make it fit, and it could speed things up.
 

txvwnut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2015
Messages
7,649
Location
Bedford, Texas
If you have a known flat surface you can clamp it to, loosen all of the bolts that hold it together and clamp it down and re-tighten all of the bolts or if you have the ability weld it all up. I did this with one of the orange HF presses. I did find that none of the holes actually lined up correctly which is why it got welded.
 

Renegade1LI

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 11, 2018
Messages
4,993
Location
long island ny
Like GeoBruin said for that price if it works keep it, I had a HF press for years & can't say a bad word about it for the price.
 

kyrbz

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 30, 2012
Messages
1,322
Location
midwest US
Good gravy, you can see the wonky from outer space.

Still, turd-polishing can be kinda fun, in a sick way...

HF's smallest air-powered bottle jack is 12 tons. Would it even fit into this one? You could probably make it fit, and it could speed things up.
I’ll second the air powered jack. Best improvement you can make to HF frame presses. The anvil was welded crooked on my 12t, so I also remade the entire piece out of heavy channel steel and made it so it has interchangeable anvils 👍

7445DD35-6C52-4577-9861-673D704C5F9C.jpeg
 
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Darby9

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2020
Messages
110
Location
San Francisco
Thanks for all the feedback. Geobruin--hadn't thought about the short span on the top w/ the A frame, and that makes sense. Obvious, now that I think about it.
Good gravy, you can see the wonky from outer space.

Still, turd-polishing can be kinda fun, in a sick way...

HF's smallest air-powered bottle jack is 12 tons. Would it even fit into this one? You could probably make it fit, and it could speed things up.

It's pretty bad. It can be un-wonkified if I loosened everything up and squared it, but I was in a hurry to use it at first, so I shimmed and clamped and used it as-received. I suspect some holes are misaligned, and the 1/8" strap uprights are just wimpy looking. They didn't even paint the angle iron for the base :rolleyes:.
IMG_2620.jpg

I have polished many a turd tool, and I'd be wiser to work a few extra hours and go buy a real Dake bench top press for $550 and write it off. That's what I would have done if I'd anticipated better...

dake.JPG

But I'm not very wise, and the Dake can't be broken down into two pieces as easily. This will live under the workbench for 95% of its life.

I’ll second the air powered jack. Best improvement you can make to HF frame presses. The anvil was welded crooked on my 12t, so I also remade the entire piece out of heavy channel steel and made it so it has interchangeable anvils 👍

Nice rework. I like that anvil. I don't think I'll spring for the air assist though--I don't do much deep draw or press out long shafts, and I have use of a bigger press if I plan ahead. First use for this was stamping a 0.030" dish into copper parts. I banged thru 90 of them in about 90 minutes, once I got done screwing around with shims and squares.

Given the Tormach in the background, I strongly suspect there's a welder lurking somewhere.
Yes, there's a MIG beside the mill, and I can use it just as well as the dude who made this press. Which is to say: questionably. :p
 
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laser3kw

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 17, 2012
Messages
7,276
Location
northen IL
Good gravy, you can see the wonky from outer space.

Still, turd-polishing can be kinda fun, in a sick way...

HF's smallest air-powered bottle jack is 12 tons. Would it even fit into this one? You could probably make it fit, and it could speed things up.

I’ll second the air powered jack. Best improvement you can make to HF frame presses. The anvil was welded crooked on my 12t, so I also remade the entire piece out of heavy channel steel and made it so it has interchangeable anvils 👍
I just did the air/hydraulic conversion on my engine crane and 20ton press. well worth it
 

Steve_P

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5,185
I have a 20-25 year old 12T HF press, it's free standing, about 5' tall, and has a similar "A-frame" top. No issues with it at all, and I've maxed it out. I actually like that design better than the current 20T as the A-frame fits together and tightens up nicely; unlike my current 20T with 2-3 mm gaps everywhere that I had to stuff flat washers into.
 
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Darby9

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 18, 2020
Messages
110
Location
San Francisco
Finally wrapped this one up:

  • Replaced the various pieces of angle iron with two pieces of 3x3" square tube
  • Made a ram guide from hollow Al rod (inside the top 3" tube). HF design was two pieces of 1/8" steel w/ huge clearance holes...
  • Shortened the A frame bars slightly, made a new pusher piece with channel and 1" ram to replace the flat plate and 3/8" rod
  • EBay fixture plate with two locating pins
  • Handle made from pipe, plus a $3 foam grip from McMaster
  • Release knob made from an Al knob, magnet glued inside.
Some design compromised based on what I had in the scrap bin.

Please don't zoom in on my welds if there are children present or if you have a weak stomach. Haven't welded in years and the gas line kept pulling out of the welder. I'm a **** welder anyway, but this is particularly bad.

It's probably a little less functional for general use w/ this arrangement, but it's good for the stamping/embossing work I need it for--I was able to hold stamping depth w/in 0.002" across 60 parts, and that's what matters. Last pic is a typical part--simple tool steel die, laser cut 0.040" copper blanks, then countersink the holes and stamp the dish.
 

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