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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,679
Location
Far NE Oregon
The friend who had me weld up the outhouse throne bought 44 dented kegs from the brewery to make a pontoon boat. That project doesn't seem to have gotten off the ground, or on the water.

But it still could happen! Fairing out the hulls between the kegs... and making reasonable bows... there's the rub. I've had some boat-building experience.
 

Old Man Roger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Messages
17,439
Location
Palm Coast Florida
The friend who had me weld up the outhouse throne bought 44 dented kegs from the brewery to make a pontoon boat. That project doesn't seem to have gotten off the ground, or on the water.

But it still could happen! Fairing out the hulls between the kegs... and making reasonable bows... there's the rub. I've had some boat-building experience.
Well at least a floating dock then?
 

LXCam

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 23, 2013
Messages
19,093
Location
AZ
The friend who had me weld up the outhouse throne bought 44 dented kegs from the brewery to make a pontoon boat. That project doesn't seem to have gotten off the ground, or on the water.

But it still could happen! Fairing out the hulls between the kegs... and making reasonable bows... there's the rub. I've had some boat-building experience.
A keg boat, you guys are way over thinking this welding gig.

A few of these
IMG_5781.jpeg
Several dozen rolls of
IMG_5782.jpeg
A box of these
IMG_5785.jpegA couple hours with a screw gun




And you’re styling bro
IMG_5786.jpeg
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,679
Location
Far NE Oregon
We have plenty of those 35 gal plastic drums, too, but where's the welding connection? I have TIG and MIG, but no plastic welders.

Besides, you still need to do some fairing between the drums or kegs and make some kind of half-way hydro-dynamic bows--that are also symmetrical--to have decent boat.
 

kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,461
Location
Upstate New York
We have plenty of those 35 gal plastic drums, too, but where's the welding connection? I have TIG and MIG, but no plastic welders.

Besides, you still need to do some fairing between the drums or kegs and make some kind of half-way hydro-dynamic bows--that are also symmetrical--to have decent boat.
In the homemade pontoon world those are considered nice-to-haves.
 

txvwnut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 1, 2015
Messages
7,603
Location
Bedford, Texas
I wish I had pics but about 30 years ago at the day job one of the guys started collecting empty freon tanks. When we asked him what he was planning on doing with them he said, I'm going to make a boat. We all wanted to see this so we made sure he got tanks that weren't compromised. When he got done with it it looked quite impressive, even took an old Evinrude lower unit that the engine was trashed and mounted a Briggs and Stratton 5hp to it.
 

mv213

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 29, 2014
Messages
660
Location
Dallas, OR (the OTHER "Big D")
Snowplow took out our mailbox... again. What would be an appropriate mailbox for a brewpub

We actually got approval from our Postmaster to use it! I built and installed it in '17, so it seems the snowplow drivers give it some respect.

Enough for now....
Cool projects! Enterprise/Joseph/Wallowa Lake are some of my favorite parts of Oregon.
 

FTG-05

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 11, 2012
Messages
1,524
Location
TN
A keg boat, you guys are way over thinking this welding gig.

A few of these
IMG_5781.jpeg
Several dozen rolls of
IMG_5782.jpeg
A box of these
IMG_5785.jpegA couple hours with a screw gun




And you’re styling bro
IMG_5786.jpeg
Luke of YTs Outdoor Boys fame made one of those several years ago. IRC, he used plastic containers as the floats. He even built a little cabin on top for overnight camping with his three boys.

Here you go:

 

Old Man Roger

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 6, 2017
Messages
17,439
Location
Palm Coast Florida
Much easier and more practical. Problem is, all the dock spaces on our local lake are taken. A beer-keg party-raft... just a beautiful idea that needs to be realized!
Yup, add a trolling motor and you’re off to the races..lol
A keg boat, you guys are way over thinking this welding gig.

A few of these
IMG_5781.jpeg
Several dozen rolls of
IMG_5782.jpeg
A box of these
IMG_5785.jpegA couple hours with a screw gun




And you’re styling bro
IMG_5786.jpeg

In the homemade pontoon world those are considered nice-to-haves.
See, :beer: we’re on the same page here.lol

And by the way, I find it comically ironic that the guy named beer hippie is rightly pointing out that you should always build a boat properly and safely, and Kay is on the side of beer cans and drywall screws..lol

I think we all know if Kay built a boat it would look like this. And it would probably fly too. Yes, that would make Kay a steampunk flying pirate ship captain.

I can see it.🏴‍☠️

051ECAD9-44B8-40B1-BD06-8693FCB1EAEF.jpeg
 

kaymccampbell

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 27, 2015
Messages
29,461
Location
Upstate New York
Yup, add a trolling motor and you’re off to the races..lol



See, :beer: we’re on the same page here.lol

And by the way, I find it comically ironic that the guy named beer hippie is rightly pointing out that you should always build a boat properly and safely, and Kay is on the side of beer cans and drywall screws..lol

I think we all know if Kay built a boat it would look like this. And it would probably fly too. Yes, that would make Kay a steampunk flying pirate ship captain.

I can see it.🏴‍☠️

051ECAD9-44B8-40B1-BD06-8693FCB1EAEF.jpeg
I dream of that boat. I can afford this.
1707148162378.png
 

WoodsTruck

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 12, 2013
Messages
1,020
No, it was designed as a remote warming shelter for our snowmobile club. The groomer could tow it to our determined ride destination, play area, and then a fire built. The stove is not installed for the picture obviously. Cooler curtains were to be installed once on the hill to retain heat.
 

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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,679
Location
Far NE Oregon
Just in case anyone else is thinking of building a beer keg wood stove, here's the "secret sauce":

4103661903_5579916841_o.jpg

The two vents pointing up and out serve to add air to the vaporized fuels above the wood--kind of an after-burner effect. Before I added them, the stove would pulse badly as those vapors combusted--like one of those pulse-jets--to the point of shooting flames out of the intake.

A lot of people were skeptical about the keg surviving the heat. It's 316L stainless steel, not, as many think, aluminum. On my first test firing after the mods above, I melted a beer bottle atop the stove. It's still running at the ski hill fifteen years later.
 
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LXCam

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Apr 23, 2013
Messages
19,093
Location
AZ
Yup, add a trolling motor and you’re off to the races..lol



See, :beer: we’re on the same page here.lol

And by the way, I find it comically ironic that the guy named beer hippie is rightly pointing out that you should always build a boat properly and safely, and Kay is on the side of beer cans and drywall screws..lol

I think we all know if Kay built a boat it would look like this. And it would probably fly too. Yes, that would make Kay a steampunk flying pirate ship captain.

I can see it.🏴‍☠️

051ECAD9-44B8-40B1-BD06-8693FCB1EAEF.jpeg

I dream of that boat. I can afford this.
1707148162378.png
Kay, all you really need to do is pay @royce a visit. I have no doubt he’s got enough scrape laying around to build OMR’s vision . 😆
 

jwith68

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 10, 2006
Messages
1,639
Location
EC Missouri
And you’re styling bro
IMG_5786.jpeg
Have to appreciate the use of sawmill slabs - no worries about whether your cordless drill is quiet enough to dismantle your neighbor's deck at 3AM without waking him up. And, even though silver plastic tarps hold up better, this matches your barrels, and you can't help it the guy down the road would only spring for a blue one to cover up his firewood pile. Heck, by the time the sun destroys this one, maybe the guy up by the state road will have a silver one on that seventy-something El Camino back of his shed!
 

ObnoxiousFumes

Well-known member
Joined
May 22, 2023
Messages
1,490
Location
Southwest Sask
Have to appreciate the use of sawmill slabs - no worries about whether your cordless drill is quiet enough to dismantle your neighbor's deck at 3AM without waking him up. And, even though silver plastic tarps hold up better, this matches your barrels, and you can't help it the guy down the road would only spring for a blue one to cover up his firewood pile. Heck, by the time the sun destroys this one, maybe the guy up by the state road will have a silver one on that seventy-something El Camino back of his shed!
That's the spirit!
Modern-day Huck Finn vibes there 😂
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,679
Location
Far NE Oregon
After seeing all these kegs
Turned a few kegs into kettles. Should've taken more pictures, they were fun to make for a local home brewhaha guy.
Couldn't find room for any more TC ports?

I work in a regional brewery, and we probably don't have that many TC ports in our entire fermenter hall!
 

sqznby

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 26, 2013
Messages
982
Location
Coastal NC
Couldn't find room for any more TC ports?

I work in a regional brewery, and we probably don't have that many TC ports in our entire fermenter hall!
I'm sure he could've haha.
He laid everything out and wanted me to stickem on. Not sure the method to his madness but, I did about 8 in total for him
 

GaryM909

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 11, 2016
Messages
1,519
Location
Calgary, Alberta, Canada
I dislike that torch, but my foot pedal cord was sliced somehow and that torch has a switch so.
20240201_175214.jpg20240201_200803.jpg
I spent a couple weeks building flex hoses similar to that about 20 years ago. Some had flanges or *******. A few had open ends like yours in the picture. Longest one was about 10'. 1/2" - 6" in diameter. All were custom made mostly for industrial service for oil/gas. Ranked right up there with the most boring job in the world.
 

Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,679
Location
Far NE Oregon
Here's a project from a few years ago. This one is actual work, not for fun.

I had to add eight inches of height to this nearly-new piece of equipment:

48718962013_03923f6991_b.jpg

That's a beer bottle depalletizer (depal). You load it up with a pallet of bottles and it automatically feeds them, one layer at a time, onto the conveyor leading into the bottling line. In theory. If you hold your mouth just right.

Problem was (this time), the guy who ordered the machine screwed up. He ordered it to fit some custom pallets we had for a while that were one layer shorter than the normal glass pallet. Instead of just ordering one for a normal pallet, he had them custom-build this one for those odd-size pallets (he also ordered it set up for 480V 3-phase--we have 240V 3-phase so re-wiring the whole machine was my first project). Well,, that deal went away after a few years and now we have to adapt to the real world-size pallets. TIMM! Just add another layer of height to the depal, OK?

I fabbed up some extensions for the legs from 1/8" wall 1 1/2" square tubing:

48719467482_c571fcd110_b.jpg

And welded them on:

48719467572_bf4f71a996_b.jpg


48719297511_3333bdaaa8_b.jpg

Added some extensions to the four rails the lift of the depal runs on:

48719297476_3d1d8f788f_b.jpg

Some lateral bracing might be over-kill, but sure can't hurt:

48722636403_98f498501c_b.jpg

A few coats of Rustoleum Safety Red and it's looking OK--but....

All the safety guards also have to be extended.

48718962148_e24dc5c478_b.jpg

48719297421_faac573cac_b.jpg

48718961903_266a5e987e_b.jpg

Just a little more fab work on the outfeed to the conveyor so it matches the new height:

48761508141_a83c7ea535_b.jpg

We're back in business.

Any job that starts with the word "Just".... Ten days, start to finish--it didn't help that the canning line was still in operation so we had to keep shuffling the bottle depal around the warehouse while working on it. It was October, so outside wasn't a good option for most of the time.
 
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Beerhippie

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 13, 2023
Messages
9,679
Location
Far NE Oregon
Here's a project from a few years ago. This one is actual work, not for fun.

I had to add eight inches of height to this nearly-new piece of equipment:

48718962013_03923f6991_b.jpg

That's a beer bottle depalletizer (depal). You load it up with a pallet of bottles and it automatically feeds them, one layer at a time, onto the conveyor leading into the bottling line. In theory. If you hold your mouth just right.

Problem was (this time), the guy who ordered the machine screwed up. He ordered it to fit some custom pallets we had for a while that were one layer shorter than the normal glass pallet. Instead of just ordering one for a normal pallet, he had them custom-build this one for those odd-size pallets (he also ordered it set up for 480V 3-phase--we have 240V 3-phase so re-wiring the whole machine was my first project). Well,, that deal went away after a few years and now we have to adapt to the real world-size pallets. TIMM! Just add another layer of height to the depal, OK?

I fabbed up some extensions for the legs from 1/8" wall 1 1/2" square tubing:

48719467482_c571fcd110_b.jpg

And welded them on:

48719467572_bf4f71a996_b.jpg


48719297511_3333bdaaa8_b.jpg

Added some extensions to the four rails the lift of the depal runs on:

48719297476_3d1d8f788f_b.jpg

Some lateral bracing might be over-kill, but sure can't hurt:

48722636403_98f498501c_b.jpg

A few coats of Rustoleum Safety Red and it's looking OK--but....

All the safety guards also have to be extended.

48718962148_e24dc5c478_b.jpg

48719297421_faac573cac_b.jpg

48718961903_266a5e987e_b.jpg

Just a little more fab work on the outfeed to the conveyor so it matches the new height:

48761508141_a83c7ea535_b.jpg

We're back in business.

Any job that starts with the word "Just".... Ten days, start to finish--it didn't help that the canning line was still in operation so we had to keep shuffling the bottle depal around the warehouse while working on it. It was October, so outside wasn't a good option for most of the time.
This is an example of what happens when someone lets the marketing guy order production machinery.
 

danielbuck

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 15, 2014
Messages
919
Do you have issues with the bit wondering with the quarter size hole in the jig?
I like the idea of the small trash can under the DP.
the bit does wander a little bit, especially if the tube isn't centered well with the bit. For times when I need it to be perfect, I'll start with a short center drill, and then use a regular drill (or sometimes just use a stepped drill bit if I only need to go through 1 side of the tube).

But for these holes, they were simply holes in the tube to rosette weld a smaller tube that slips inside of them, so I really didn't are if they were perfectly centered or not.

I do find that using the dewalt "pilot point" drill bits works nicely for this. I don't use that style drill bit very often (mostly because I don't have any way to sharpen them!) but for drilling into tubes they work nicely.

The metal trash can under the drill press table has been fantastic, I got the idea a long time ago from Bob Ross, he kept a bucket under his paint easel to clean off his brushes, so I think of him every time I clean off my chip brush :LOL:
 
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