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Drill Press stand/cart Build

MillerMav

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Joined
Feb 6, 2013
Messages
269
This is the second iteration of this project. I began by cutting the bottom storage area off of an old craftsman bottom box I got back in 2000. Its a basic box; no ball bearings or anything. Its fairly beat up and I had put anything of any value in it in years. So I thought "this would make a decent start to getting my 3/4 height drill press mobile. Plus it would free up some space by moving some fab tools out of my mechanic box and into a dedicated area.

Originally I put the bracing on the bottom of the box (that's still there) a rough caster layout and tried bolting the press to the top of the box. That proved to be WAY to flimsy even after reinforcing the area with 1/16" plate.

So that leads me to yesterday....

I hacked up the original design and started over again after work! The only thing I kept was the 1/8" plate and bracing on the box.

I tore apart my failed weld table (that rebuild will be a whole other thread) and modified the side members to be smaller and luckily they were already a pretty decent depth for the project. It was probably overkill but I tied those on angles into a 4"x4" center section from the original design. This gave me a spot for casters and the triangulation ensured a very rigid base. It also gave the bottom box a cool "floating" look. Now comes the drill press mounting.

I knew I wanted to have it centered side-to-side and offset toward the rear. I laid some 1.5" angle across the uprights and then tied some 2" tube across to create a base for the drill press. I removed the cast base that came with the press and balanced the press on the tube so I could mark the bolt centers. Once that was done I had to bolt the press back onto the base so that I could drill and tap the holes for the base to thread into. I happened to have a bunch of M6 bolts from an Audi V8 block (rod caps) that were a good length and had a nice shoulder on the cap.

I placed it and bolted it up and even though everything is simply tacked in it's pretty rigid all around and I think it should fit the bill. The box is tad a low but the height the press is just about perfect for me.

Tuesday work: To much time spent grinding/cutting and a little fitting/welding.
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Today's work:
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Like I said; everything is still tack welded in place. My goal is to also get my Motor/Grinder mounted to this thing as well as an eventual belt sanding set up (gotta keep my CL eyes open for the sander) so I may not finish weld some things for a bit but for the most part I am done with the drill press section. It has worked out well. The only thing I might change is going from angle to 2" tube on the top but so far I have done this whole thing with scraps!

Any comments/suggestions are definitely welcome and take it easy on my beads I am still in the beginner stages on my Millermatic 180.
 
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garboui

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Joined
Jun 30, 2011
Messages
999
Location
Southern Ontario
Sweet setup. IDK what your intending to keep in there but it sure would be handy to have all thing drilling related located in that box.

One suggestion though. IMO I would add a front rail parallel to the top two and a small brace or two central to the column so that it will keep it from torqueing front to back as you put different loads on the DP. Then again that's more work and something that could be done as an afterthought if needed.
 

BD1

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Mar 18, 2007
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north side
Nice, I would add a piece of plywood on top of the box. it may help save the top pf the box when something falls.
 
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MillerMav

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Joined
Feb 6, 2013
Messages
269
Wheres the Toyota? I noticed the Marlin Crawler sticker.

The Toyota is gone I am sad to say. I had an awesome reg. cab 96 Taco that 4wd 4cyl 5spd (I had the MC UHMW shift bushing in there). I regret selling it but with the family growing and it getting on with frame rust and maintenance issues I figured it would be better to let it go to the next guy. It was paid for; in hindsight I should have kept it but oh well. I'll get another Taco one day!

Nice, I would add a piece of plywood on top of the box. it may help save the top pf the box when something falls.

Great call. I fully intend on getting some plywood up there in the near future.

I like that a lot. It gives you a place to store things for the press.

Exactly! I have probably about 1.5 drawers worth of space I can free up in my big box by moving drill bits, hole saws, angle grinders, discs, grinders, wheels, etc. into this box. I did a rough "throw stuff in to check it out" process yesterday afternoon and it will all fit and then some so maybe tonight I will organize it better and put some drawer liner in.

I'll throw some more pics up of the drawer usage then its off to motor fitting, sander fitting, finish weld and paint!
 
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kald

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Mar 31, 2012
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673
Location
Central Fl
Very cool but do you use any cutting oil? If so how do you keep it out of the box?
 
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MillerMav

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Feb 6, 2013
Messages
269
Very cool but do you use any cutting oil? If so how do you keep it out of the box?

Not that often but maybe more in the future. If I do it's simply 5w-30 Dino oil for drill and tap work on steel pieces.

You make a good point though maybe I will build a trough instead of plywood on the bottom......always something more to improve on! lol......
 

garboui

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Jun 30, 2011
Messages
999
Location
Southern Ontario
The plywood wouldn't necessarily be the worst. Yes it wont wipe clean like a metal trough but it will absorb the oil. It wont always look the cleanest but you also wont end up accumulating chips and oil making swarf soup. The wood will eventually get very oil laden and cutting a new piece to replace wouldn't be too much work. Also with the wood when you drop a drill bit or something small its less likely to bounce off and send you searching.
 

BD1

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Mar 18, 2007
Messages
4,602
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north side
If you use plywood just get a piece of light gauge sheetmetal to lay on top of plywood. I know if I had that setup something would definitely unwanted would land on the top of box.
 
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