TLCDino
Well-known member
So I am a rookie welder. I picked it up as a hobby last year and am basically self taught thanks to YouTube and a few forums.
That being said, here are a few pics of a stand mount I built and am really stoked about. It started as a heavy duty steel table that wanted in my garage. Here is the evolution:
The stand works with a trailer-hitch type set-up. Meaning I can slide it in and out of the receiver part when not in use. I can also attach different "bench mounted tools.
The Park Tools peice was the item I obviously didn't make, but I needed to build the base. The Park Tools bench mount was just way to short. On their base, the bike is just off the floor versus at a good working level. So, I made a new pole out of identical steel stock that came from Park Tools. I just needed to cut the post, drill a few holes then weld the post to the base plate.
Thing works awesome! It is completely rock solid versus the portable Park Tools model I was using:
The thing holds a bike perfectly. Not a wiggle when you are trying to apply leverage to your tools.
Now a little paint is in order....
Any thoughts for improvements?
That being said, here are a few pics of a stand mount I built and am really stoked about. It started as a heavy duty steel table that wanted in my garage. Here is the evolution:
The stand works with a trailer-hitch type set-up. Meaning I can slide it in and out of the receiver part when not in use. I can also attach different "bench mounted tools.
The Park Tools peice was the item I obviously didn't make, but I needed to build the base. The Park Tools bench mount was just way to short. On their base, the bike is just off the floor versus at a good working level. So, I made a new pole out of identical steel stock that came from Park Tools. I just needed to cut the post, drill a few holes then weld the post to the base plate.
Thing works awesome! It is completely rock solid versus the portable Park Tools model I was using:
The thing holds a bike perfectly. Not a wiggle when you are trying to apply leverage to your tools.
Now a little paint is in order....
Any thoughts for improvements?

