I see a lot of people doing this here?
doesn't it wobble, move or skid when you work on it hard?
(Thinking of making a small version to hold a vise but I think it might tip)
Do what I did on a heavy jig I made [that needs to be moved occasionally]
I used casters to move it, and adjustable machinery feet beside them.
The machinery feet were adjusted to level with 3/4 plywood spacers under them to keep the casters just off the ground.
When I need to move it, I jack it up [it is heavy] and pull the spacers out so the casters touch the ground.
Works great and is stable when I need it to be.
I am thinking deployable wheels also,
2 bottle jacks will lower each pair of beam with caster onto the floor.
Maybe just a 4x4 wood post on vertical pins
If the post is flipped 90 degrees maybe it can act as stablizer as well.
I was just thinking about the landing gear idea when I rebuild my bench. I'm thinking of using those cheap car scissor jacks, one on each end. No hydraulic fluid, no seals to go bad, no pumping. If the legs are at least 2x4 width the jack would be contained in the legs, so no wasted space. Drill a hole big enough for the rod to slide through in the front. I wouldn't use one on a car, but fine for a bench. I'll try to sketch up something for a visual.
View attachment 517725
Do this...spend some money and buy the best casters you can afford. These are about 40 bucks at amazon...they each hold 800 lbs and lock down tight. I beat the hell out of stuff on my tables and they don't move at all. I did the whole cheap caster routine...and then got to these type...steel core, lube fittings, non flattening material that doesn't get flat spots even after a year and over a ton of weight on them...you won't regret the investment. Also buy the biggest diameter you can..as that makes rolling easier.
I am thinking deployable wheels also,
2 bottle jacks will lower each pair of beam with caster onto the floor.
Maybe just a 4x4 wood post on vertical pins
If the post is flipped 90 degrees maybe it can act as stablizer as well.
I'm fully aware there are better ways of doing this, but they also cost a lot more. This was about free. For occasional moving and limited cost it works just fine, and its stable when up on the wheels.
I think everyone realizes there are very nice casters and/or feet that snap down into place, but people don't want to pay more for wheels than they spent on their bench.
As much as I love the awesome builds on this board, we don't all have the resources to build or buy exactly what we want. I don't like my HF drill press, but its better than not having one until I can get what I want. Some of us make do with what we've got.
I was just putting an idea out there that works. If you don't like it, don't build it.