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My approach to making a welding table

Dying Fetus

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 19, 2009
Messages
60
Location
Tomb of the Mutilated
I built a welding table because I needed one badly. I thought you guys might like to see how I did it.

I started with a basic 4'x8' "frame". It's made out of 0.120" wall 2"x4" tubing, and the legs are 0.120" wall 3"x3" tubing.
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Sample of MIG welds:
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I like to have some adjustability in height, as well as the ability to make it level. This is what I came up with a few years ago and I've put it on every table I've built since.

I turned a few 3/4" nuts on the lathe, such that there's a shoulder to them, as shown below. The turned portion of the nut measures 1" in diameter.
IMG_0744.jpg


I also faced a few bolts on the lathe.
IMG_0745.jpg


Next step was to grab a circular piece of steel and drill a 1" hole in it. This allows the shoulder of the nut to "catch" the edge of the hole and carry the weight of the table. A small bead secures the nut to the plate.
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I don't have any other pics of the process. I added some extra bracing to the middle of the table so the table top wouldn't sag under heavy weight. I also built a lower perimeter frame that serves two purposes: 1) it will hold a shelf and 2) it would allow me to move the table around with a pallet jack. The table top is a 1/2" thick.
IMG_0771.jpg


A lot of people make the table frame smaller than the top and leave an unsupported border of roughly 6-8" so that they can clamp stuff to the table. What I've noticed is that most of the banging ends up on the edge of the table, and unless your table top is 2" thick, you end up bending it. I make my table frames the same size as the sheet and use the larger "F-style" clamps.

Thanks for looking! :)
 
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Strouty

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
38,215
Location
Southern Maine
Looks great! I am going to be making one soon. You need some expanded metal for the bottom shelf, then a nice coat of paint!
 

Ign

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 7, 2006
Messages
12,769
Location
Butte Peak ND
Nice. I just capped 4" sq on the bottom w plate, drilled a hole for acme to pass thru. Grabbed some "hockey pucks" from the scrap bin at work for the actual feet. The pucks get the nut up off the floor making adjustment a helluva lot easier.

Love the 4x8 size!
 

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GarageEnvy

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 17, 2009
Messages
1,282
Location
Fresno
TIG welded table feet with components hand tooled on a lathe. This is why you'll never see me label any of my projects "mega" or "ultimate" or "best ever".

I'm not ashamed to say I sourced my table feet from Ebay
 
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