machine_punk
Well-known member
Hello! I am getting a large piece of manually-operated bench equipment for The Aerodrome Studio soon. I've got a few questions that I'm sure a few of you have dealt with in the past...
1. How do you design a bench to hold a VERY heavy piece of equipment (This isn't a 'structural' question...I can easily make it 'strong enough,' I am more interested in 'how do you design a bench which won't tip over). I suspect that this is a 'center of gravity' issue...as in, get the center of gravity below a certain point and the likelihood of tipping during normal use approaches 'zero.'
Here are the parameters I am working with...
- It weighs 1200 pounds (550 kg). (plus up to a potential of around 150 pounds of materials, which might be processed on this machine) (68 kg)
- The top of the bench needs to be approximately 56" by 15" (142 cm x 38 cm)
- I will build a fairly tall bench (34", or 85 cm)
- It is manually operated (like a sheet metal roller or sheet metal brake).
Is there some calculation for figuring out how wide I need to make the base, to keep from tipping over? (I know that is a little vague, and that is on purpose...I don't want someone else to pull the rug out from under my deal. If someone definitely knows the answer, I'd be willing to PM that person with more details. I am definitely looking for general answers at this time)
2. How do I get this machine into the garage? Or, more accurately, how do I get it into the garage, without spending more than I paid for the piece of equipment and shipping?
- I am having it delivered to a local freight yard, where they will lift it into the back of a rental truck or rental trailer. (even if I pay for residential delivery and lift gate service, in my experience, that just gets it to street level. I have to get it into the garage. Even if I get it into the garage on the floor, I still have to get it up on top of the bench I build.)
- The distance from the street to the garage door is minimal, approx 15 feet / 5 meters. There is, however a gradual rise to the driveway, which is painful enough when I am trying to roll the fully-loaded, 5-drawer, service cart on it, much less an object weighing a little over half a ton.
Thanks! I'm open to pretty much any idea here, other than, "well, don't buy it, then it won't be a problem."
I am looking forward to seeing how others have solved this problem...
M_P
1. How do you design a bench to hold a VERY heavy piece of equipment (This isn't a 'structural' question...I can easily make it 'strong enough,' I am more interested in 'how do you design a bench which won't tip over). I suspect that this is a 'center of gravity' issue...as in, get the center of gravity below a certain point and the likelihood of tipping during normal use approaches 'zero.'
Here are the parameters I am working with...
- It weighs 1200 pounds (550 kg). (plus up to a potential of around 150 pounds of materials, which might be processed on this machine) (68 kg)
- The top of the bench needs to be approximately 56" by 15" (142 cm x 38 cm)
- I will build a fairly tall bench (34", or 85 cm)
- It is manually operated (like a sheet metal roller or sheet metal brake).
Is there some calculation for figuring out how wide I need to make the base, to keep from tipping over? (I know that is a little vague, and that is on purpose...I don't want someone else to pull the rug out from under my deal. If someone definitely knows the answer, I'd be willing to PM that person with more details. I am definitely looking for general answers at this time)
2. How do I get this machine into the garage? Or, more accurately, how do I get it into the garage, without spending more than I paid for the piece of equipment and shipping?
- I am having it delivered to a local freight yard, where they will lift it into the back of a rental truck or rental trailer. (even if I pay for residential delivery and lift gate service, in my experience, that just gets it to street level. I have to get it into the garage. Even if I get it into the garage on the floor, I still have to get it up on top of the bench I build.)
- The distance from the street to the garage door is minimal, approx 15 feet / 5 meters. There is, however a gradual rise to the driveway, which is painful enough when I am trying to roll the fully-loaded, 5-drawer, service cart on it, much less an object weighing a little over half a ton.
Thanks! I'm open to pretty much any idea here, other than, "well, don't buy it, then it won't be a problem."
I am looking forward to seeing how others have solved this problem...
M_P
Last edited:

