I recall hearing a friend talk about trying to repurpose a bed frame and he had a most horrendous time cutting and welding it. No clue why. Sometimes free material isn't cheap enough.
Funny, I did the same search on google and found more than one thread on this site.
I just built a rolling frame for my horizontal bandsaw. No pictures yet. I hate working with bedframes. They're as hard as woodpecker lips, so saw blades wear out quickly and you have to drill holes at a very slow speed or you burn up drill bits. The steel welds really weird too. I almost thought I didn't have my shielding gas turned on.
I had it on hand and it was the right size though.
Its funny this post came up. On Saturday the neighborhood kids wanted me to work on a skateboard project for them. It was an old piece of bed frame that they wanted mounted to some pieces of 2x4 so they could grind/rail slide or whatever you call it now. I really struggled drilling holes in that thing and it took about 2 hours to do that project. The kids sure are happy, and that is all that matters, right?
I used the site search with "Bed Frame" as the term. Link to your project?
Pretty much ...
Any metallurgist on the site? Be interesting to know what kind of steel it is. I don't see it as being brittle either, just tough.
Link to your project?
Great material for beginners.
Grind it and see what color sparks you get. That'd be a starting point.
I used the site search with "Bed Frame" as the term. Link to your project?
Pretty much ...
Any metallurgist on the site? Be interesting to know what kind of steel it is. I don't see it as being brittle either, just tough.
Who said they would be? There is more to steel than concentration of defects. It wouldn't be hard to drill if it were standard low carbon steel.No, there's no link.
Do a google search on "metal bed frame projects". If you don't get something on the first search you do sometimes you gotta change your search terms. Site searches limit you to the site you're on.
I would think quite the opposite.
Sparks aren't any different color than regular hot rolled or cold rolled steel.
Who said they would be? There is more to steel than concentration of defects. It wouldn't be hard to drill if it were standard low carbon steel.

I use them all the time to put everything on casters, local thrift store sells them.
I said nothing about the color of sparks being different between cold worked steel and hot rolled.Nobody said they would be. I just stated that they are the same color as your basic mild steel.
You're the one that suggested grinding to see what color the sparks are, inferring that there would be a difference..![]()
you mean this avatar?![]()
I can't fathom why people deal with bed frames. The cost savings of the "free" steel is immediately negated by the broken tools, extra time and effort and inconsistent results.
Bed frames do make excellent scrap metal, however.
I said nothing about the color of sparks being different between cold worked steel and hot rolled.
Holy cow. I'm saying that the color of sparks from bed frame steel are no different than the color from mild steel, whether hot rolled or cold rolled or whatever. You suggested that the color of sparks might point to a material makeup. It doesn't.
is that part of the bedframe project?
You mean this Avatar?![]()
I can't fathom why people deal with bed frames. The cost savings of the "free" steel is immediately negated by the broken tools, extra time and effort and inconsistent results.
Bed frames do make excellent scrap metal, however.