IMG_5704 by MichaelBikel, on Flickr
IMG_2733 by MichaelBikel, on Flickr
IMG_2659 by MichaelBikel, on FlickrI would call them floor locks [emoji106]What would you call the retractable feet that disengage the wheels? Beautiful bench btw
72highboy, what brand of extrusions are those, and could you share the catalog numbers, etc.? Really nice looking bench!
Might be one of the 80/20 profiles. See links below.
https://8020.net/catalog/category/view/s/shop/id/837/?cat=379
https://www.8020.net/
Great stuff and fun to work with but can be expensive.
My guess is an edge face made of one layer of plywood all the way around. I think I can see the facing edge on the top.Laminated plywood? It looks like it's more than 1.5" thick. How do you get the edges to look like that? (Like its a block)
Taylor: nice start to your garage/shop. i like the rubber mat in front of your bench that you'll be glad you put there if you stand there for any length of time. just curious is the product you put on the lower part of your walls is it metal roofing or siding and did you just install with torque headed screws?
well done

Taylor: thanks for the great close up picture and all the information on materials. great idea.
No problem! Thanks for the interest!
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these are from newage. they sent one dented, then another (dented also)
we use one as a bar sometimes
Heres some benches cabinets i fabbed up few years ago more of a race trailer design but does the job .. I made some for my sled trailer as well
Here is mine since I am finally getting to the organization part of my garage. Just took me 4 years to get here lol.
What size square tube did you use or recommend? This also looks like aluminum; why aluminum instead of steel?
I'm looking to build an equipment cart that will be about 2' square and on rollers. It shouldn't hold more than a few hundred pounds but I also want to be able to swap grinders, wire wheel, sanders, and a vise to the top. I think only the vise would have the potential to have me put some hurt on the thing if I happened to be putting something big in it and then pounding on it.
I also like the receiver hitch mount that people have been using for vises and thought about how that might work on such a cart. I could make the top tube out of 2" square to accommodate a hitch vise or I could simply mount a receiver vertically in one corner of the cart and use something that looks like a pintle adapter to mount the vise.
Using 2" steel seems like an easy way to work in a hitch mount but it also seems like HUGE overkill if I were to make the cart out of 2" entirely.
I used 1.250" aluminum tubing ,, might be 1.500" ill have to check.. I like using aluminum for most my projects cabinets, carts , slip tanks , etc its light weight strong and no need to paint.. I dont mind tig welding especially aluminum its nice to work with.. Heres the some pics of the ones i did for my sled trailer same design basically.
Thanks Redboy, that actually came out of an aluminum smelter I used to work at. They are tearing it down and you can go in and buy whatever is left. I bought that lol. It's framed with 2x2 1/4 inch angle and plated with all 1/4 inch. It's heavy, I also have a shelf that can bolt to the top that will go to the ceiling all 1/4 as well. But that isn't going to be used. In the doors are just shelves, except on the far right one. There is a filing cabinet in there.Tell us a little more about that bench, wouldja?
It looks like it was pulled out of a battleship... or an underground bunker!
Love it!
Heres some benches cabinets i fabbed up few years ago more of a race trailer design but does the job .. I made some for my sled trailer as well
Nice work.... They look friggen awesome! Also, the trailer does as well.
That is amazing. It looks liked factory or better really! Amazing you could make that. And the push button latches as well. Beautiful work you got you some talent man.Thanks! After i saw what garage outfitter places wanted for cabinets and race trailer places like $1000 a linear foot i said not a chance I'll fire up the tig and go to work..
I used 1.250" aluminum tubing ,, might be 1.500" ill have to check.. I like using aluminum for most my projects cabinets, carts , slip tanks , etc its light weight strong and no need to paint.. I dont mind tig welding especially aluminum its nice to work with.. Heres the some pics of the ones i did for my sled trailer same design basically.
TAMPER: i don't see benches often or at all like that one and thanks for showing it to me (us) so we know they are out there. VERY COOL
any idea how heavy it is? were you able to lift one end by yourself or how did you load and unload it?
That is amazing. It looks liked factory or better really! Amazing you could make that. And the push button latches as well. Beautiful work you got you some talent man.
Do you have a detail of the insides? Also the doors how those were made. Really impressive.
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Got it. Makes a little more sense.Thank you! Im a millwright/power engineer by trade so always building or rebuilding/modifying something lol..
For the doors I got a C channel shape bent up and used 1" rigid flat board insulation as a filler and skin the sides with aluminum sheet. For the door frame i got a Z bar shape bent up, use a good aluminum cutting blade in the mitre saw an tig the back side of the joints... I got the door and frame ideas from a cabinet builder down south your way. Push button door latches and hinge material are easy to source. Lots of time into these but cost me about 1/3rd of what high end cabinets go for..
