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Compact Metal Bender

darkside

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2006
Messages
68
Location
Newfoundland
Any ideas on how to make a stand for my compact bender. I don't want to have it fixed to the floor but rather be able to move it back in a corner when not in use. It will need to be able to fasten down though so that I can bend metal without it moving around.

Tks
 
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jimvannoy

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Joined
Oct 30, 2006
Messages
1,263
Location
Mississippi
I mounted mine to a grinder stand. I also mounted my bead roller on top.
 

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TNToy

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Joined
Oct 11, 2006
Messages
1,385
Location
West Tennessee
Use "red head" drop-in anchors:

RM-34.jpg


Basically, you drill a set of ~3/4" holes in the slab with a hammer drill, drop the anchors in, and then expand them with a drift and a hammer. The bender then just bolts down to the floor, and can be unbolted and moved into the corner when not in use. If you leave the bolts in the holes to kepp them clean, it looks like this the rest of the time:

dsc01025.jpg


The anchors are available at home depot, ACE , or lowes if you know where to look. Ask a couple of employees and they'll point you in the right direction. Just explain that you're trying to bolt something down to a concrete slab, and you need something that looks like a jumbo wall-anchor. ;)

If you plan to move and want to hide them, just drill too deep. WHen you move, hammer them down into the floor and fill the hole with quikrete.
 
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Ign

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Joined
Jul 7, 2006
Messages
12,769
Location
Butte Peak ND
Receivers are your friend. Put a female on your workbench and mount the bender to any arm of your design w 2" square, just like a draw bar on your truck.
 
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D

darkside

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 19, 2006
Messages
68
Location
Newfoundland
Ign said:
Receivers are your friend. Put a female on your workbench and mount the bender to any arm of your design w 2" square, just like a draw bar on your truck.


But where do I find a female to mount on my bench?
 
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Ign

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Joined
Jul 7, 2006
Messages
12,769
Location
Butte Peak ND
darkside said:
But where do I find a female to mount on my bench?

You grab the Yellow Pages and find "steel suppliers." You go over there and tell 'em you need ** amount of 2.5" square 3/16" wall. Done. They'll know what you're doing, this is extremely common.

Any tow supply place will also sell pre-cut and drilled lengths with the reinforcement "ring" pre-welded (which you don't need and might just interfere w your work bench). The ring is simply to prevent splitting under heavy moment arm loads.

Most steel yards will sell by the foot, ask about drops they might have laying around they might sell at a discount, too. You can drill the holes for the pin yourself, and it doesn't have to be 5/8". Hell even 3/8" should be fine. You could use a bolt, or any hardware store will have a selection of clevis pins in any size you want (or buy a standard hitch pin, they're only around $4). Drilling the holes is best done with a drill press since you're going thru two planes, but you can measure, mark and drill w a hand drill, esp since this is far from a critical application. If the holes are off 'just ream 'em, it's no big deal here.

For that matter you don't even have to base this off a 2" square system, you can use any size you want that fits into any size you want..... but 2" is a good standard and going smaller isn't gonna save you any $ worth mentioning.

miscshop-044.jpg
 
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