Doug Arthurs
Well-known member
I cut my hossfeld bender short and bolt it to the table of my milling machine when I need to use it.
The best idea of all is to upgrade to a Diacro #4. Which has ratcheting capabilities (roller chain fitted around the OD) to bend stuff that would take a 10 foot long arm. Its not much to pull on the ratchet handle.
In our plant's maintenance shop we use a Diacro #3 - no ratcheting. But we use drop-in anchors which work very well and allow us to reconfigure the shop if something super large came in without having to deal with the nightmare of exposed studs. In a shop where most of the time the bender wasn't mounted I think you'd want either setscrews or corks/rubber plugs to prevent the threads from collecting too much gunk.
The diacro is a design which is 360 degrees and doesn't adapt well to hydraulics like the JD^2 or Hossfeld. Its best friend is a lathe which can make a ton of the tooling.





So I put the Diacro #4 on a wooden base that I can move with a pallet jack.
If its small, pull the handle.
If its big, use the ratchet.
A bunch of round dies & pins helps stabilize the base![]()
Lis, i just want to say you have great ideas throughout your shop. very creative, and helpful ideas. thanks.
Thank you Opa. I always hope my ideas will help in some way or more likely be the basis for a BETTER idea.
I used u-bolts from tractor/trailer for tie downs in my floor. I used water meter boxes with a cast iron cover flush mounted in the floor. It has a 3x3x3 concrete section around each.
Awesome idea[emoji481]
I just saw this thread while searching for pictures of Hossfeld stands. That's a good looking setup! Is that a #1 or #2 Hossfeld? I just ordered the hardware to convert my #2 over to hydraulic operation to bend larger tube, so I'm looking for ideas on how to package everything. I would like to incorporate the power unit and tooling storage into the stand that I build.
I just saw this thread while searching for pictures of Hossfeld stands. That's a good looking setup! Is that a #1 or #2 Hossfeld? I just ordered the hardware to convert my #2 over to hydraulic operation to bend larger tube, so I'm looking for ideas on how to package everything. I would like to incorporate the power unit and tooling storage into the stand that I build.
My Hossfeld is one of the last built by Hossfeld before they were bought out. I converted it to hydraulics. It doesn't "ratchet" it just goes around in one smooth motion.
Wow. Nice setup. [emoji481]
When were they bought out? I contacted them by phone a few years back and the fellow I talked to wasn’t very helpful.
Wow. Nice setup. [emoji481]
When were they bought out? I contacted them by phone a few years back and the fellow I talked to wasn’t very helpful.
That's what I did. 1/4" wall 2" x2" square tube about ten feet long. I bolt it to my bender stand and slide it into the hitch on my truck.
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There may have been a change in the ownership, but Hossfeld is still a small business. I talk to Rollie every time I call up there, and he's been nothing but helpful.1/28/2016 is when I bought it. This is my second one. The first was burned in a fire earlier and kinda was "warped".
I haven't spoke with them in a while now. I'm not sure who's handling the Hossfeld line now.
The OSB will delaminate like a bowl of Cornflakes, when put under stress.Bolt it to some heavy OSB. Then you stand on the OSB while bending. Your arms push one way on the bender and your legs push the opposite way on the OSB and the whole thing should stay roughly in place.