I moved my mill under my pallet rack today and want to remove the temporary pallet. I have a chain fall and come along, I would like to fabricate a "bridge" of sorts across the pallet shelving that I can secure the hoist to. I have a few different pieces of scrap steel laying around so I'll need to bounce a few questions off you fabricator guys.
I plan to(tell me if I'm crazy), take a piece of say, 2" thick wall sq tubing and cut it long enough to hang over the front and rear shelf edges, notch it out to clear the lip and let the bottom of the tubing sit on the inner shelf lip where the pallet rack shelving supports sit. This would go on the top shelf, I would move the plywood on the bottom shelf for the hoist to hang through to the mill. The over hanging lips will keep the shelves from spreading and the solid bottom sitting on the inner support should provide plenty of support there. I doubt a single piece of 2" would hold the weight so my thoughts are to double them up and stitch them together. I know the 42" deep pallet racking is good for 5,000# so that's not my worry, I want to know what scrap metal I may have laying around that would be safe to lift a ton straight up and set it back down safely. Thanks
^edited, I want to add that I only have a Hobart 140 for welding but I can plasma cut up to 1/2", drill and bolt together if I need something thicker than the 2" thick wall sq tube.

I plan to(tell me if I'm crazy), take a piece of say, 2" thick wall sq tubing and cut it long enough to hang over the front and rear shelf edges, notch it out to clear the lip and let the bottom of the tubing sit on the inner shelf lip where the pallet rack shelving supports sit. This would go on the top shelf, I would move the plywood on the bottom shelf for the hoist to hang through to the mill. The over hanging lips will keep the shelves from spreading and the solid bottom sitting on the inner support should provide plenty of support there. I doubt a single piece of 2" would hold the weight so my thoughts are to double them up and stitch them together. I know the 42" deep pallet racking is good for 5,000# so that's not my worry, I want to know what scrap metal I may have laying around that would be safe to lift a ton straight up and set it back down safely. Thanks
^edited, I want to add that I only have a Hobart 140 for welding but I can plasma cut up to 1/2", drill and bolt together if I need something thicker than the 2" thick wall sq tube.

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