JakeD
Well-known member
The whole thing started because this buddy of mine has this "shepherd's crook" style bird feeder, and the hooks were short enough that an enterprising squirrel could stretch all the way from the staff out to the bird food. I swear this isn't one of those stories where I'm trying to pawn it off like it was someone else, when really it is mine, either. Like "this one time a guy I know had the crabs..." It really is his bird feeder.
So, anyway, he also has one of those Harbor Freight rod benders and decided he ought to bend a new hook for it that was big enough to keep the squirrels out. I know, this isn't like hotrodding a '34 Ford 3Window, but we had a good time over a few barley-pops. In any event, this thread is really about the pre-project project. In order to bend the rod, we had to build a pedestal for the bender.
We scrounged up some 1/4 inch scrap steel plate and plasma'd out the top and base. Also, it the tradition of men over-engineering stuff, we used 4 inch square tube for the column.
Also, we decided that we would put some pegs on it to hold the dies. Again, we did these up in a fashion that Tim the Toolman Taylor would be proud of. 5/8 steel rod that just fit the ID of the dies. The biggest die must weigh all of 5 lbs, but I tested them by climbing my 210lb behind up on the pegs without issue.
Here it is in it's raw form.
The post pre-project project.
And last but not least, the final painted version of the rod bender. Note, in the background you can see the bird feeder. The big third hook is the contra-squirrel technology.
So, anyway, he also has one of those Harbor Freight rod benders and decided he ought to bend a new hook for it that was big enough to keep the squirrels out. I know, this isn't like hotrodding a '34 Ford 3Window, but we had a good time over a few barley-pops. In any event, this thread is really about the pre-project project. In order to bend the rod, we had to build a pedestal for the bender.
We scrounged up some 1/4 inch scrap steel plate and plasma'd out the top and base. Also, it the tradition of men over-engineering stuff, we used 4 inch square tube for the column.
Also, we decided that we would put some pegs on it to hold the dies. Again, we did these up in a fashion that Tim the Toolman Taylor would be proud of. 5/8 steel rod that just fit the ID of the dies. The biggest die must weigh all of 5 lbs, but I tested them by climbing my 210lb behind up on the pegs without issue.
Here it is in it's raw form.
The post pre-project project.
And last but not least, the final painted version of the rod bender. Note, in the background you can see the bird feeder. The big third hook is the contra-squirrel technology.
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