mv213
Well-known member
@Blue Chips that’s the most creative use of steel angle ever. I really love the caster outriggers, that just looks so great. Love this cart!
Nice rig!
@Blue Chips that’s the most creative use of steel angle ever. I really love the caster outriggers, that just looks so great. Love this cart!
@Blue Chips AWESOME job on the TIG cart. Very well done.
That's a great rotisserie. Very versatile design, and it looks very well crafted. If I had room for something like that, it would move up several notches on my 'to-do' list. I've been picking away...very slowly...at the restoration of a 1954 Dodge M37, and a rotisserie would make a lot of tasks easier.I just finished a rotisserie for use in 1965-66 Ford truck restoration mostly.
That's a very attractive screen. I can see that it took some careful planning. What is it finished with? Powder coat, perhaps?A privacy screen my wife and I designed and built for a client several years ago.
Thanks for the compliment. Yes it was powder coated.That's a very attractive screen. I can see that it took some careful planning. What is it finished with? Powder coat, perhaps?







Thanks, y'sguy. I just finished looking through your toolbox restoration thread, and I must say that's the most extensive toolbox restoration that I've ever seen. Beautiful job!Beautiful workmanship

Working on a little side project. I welded up this 2 1/2” x 1/4” tube to this 1/4” plate. The plate warped slightly. This was a trial run, so I just used the flux core wire I had in my welder. Will make welds prettier next time. I did a small stitch on each side to hold it in place and square, then welded each face.
Question is how can I prevent the 1/4” plate from warping? Clamp closer to the tube?
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yes on the elevator boltvery nicely done. The foot appears to be an elevator bolt is that correct? Thanks
Ron









Thanks, The Ducati belongs to a friendVery nice, love working with square tubing so fun. You make it look too easy
Is that a Ducati in the background?


Nice Fab.Here's another of my older welding projects:
I have a 2002 model Toro Wheel Horse 522xi, which is a small, but heavy-duty garden tractor. It's been going strong since I bought it in 2008, and it will be ready for some cosmetic updating soon.
One of the things I use Wheel Horse for is repositioning our flat-bed trailer on our property. I fabricated a trailer hitch receiver (see below) that bolts onto the back of the tractor and is easily removable, although I haven't had occasion to remove it yet.
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Thanks, @Kenstone1, fair comment about tongue weight, but it's not a problem for how I use the hitch. In fact, it's almost the opposite situation, since the trailer that I move around is used for moving and launching our floating dock. The dock extends out past the end of the trailer, so the trailer tongue actually has negative weight when loaded, and I have to add about a hundred pounds on the tongue to keep it down. And when the trailer is empty, the tongue doesn't put much weight on the hitch anyway.Nice job.
That far back from the axle, it could become a potential "wheely-bar" with the added tongue weight of the trailer.
I hope that is not the case though.








Didn't find a topic like this where everyone could share pictures of their good (or bad) welding/fab projects and maybe get pointers from other people. I'm hoping this doesnt turn into a **** fest if someone disagrees with someone elses procedures. So please, keep negative comments to yourself but share constructive criticism.
Nothing specific, ill start, even with me being embarrassed a bit about it. On with the pictures
Im a very begginer welder/fab person. I took metals in high school then dropped my motivation to continue it as a hobby, and maybe one day a career. I just started back up a few weeks ago and this was one of my first "projects".
Just a little square i made one day for practice:
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This one had a large hole in the corner of it, and was one of the worse welds i did on the whole thing.
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I never cleaned the welds either... oops.
I know not the greatest, but i dont plan on anything structural till i get a better welding unit so i figure its ok for now.
Now the welder i used, and you guys will hate me for this but...... It's a harbor freight http://www.harborfreight.com/welding/mig-flux-welders/90-amp-flux-wire-welder-98871.html
I have had it for about 4 or 5 years now. Using fluxcore wire... and its on about a 75 foot extension cord... I know i know it could change but it seems to be ok for now.
I use my HF 41/2 angle grinder to cut up the metal. Btw any suggestions on cutting and grinding disks?
Thanks for looking, post up your welding projects and gear.
Very nice fab; looks commercially-made. How did you get that crisp corner from the top plate to the side plates? Was that bent or welded from three pieces then ground/chamfered?Here's another of my older welding projects:
I have a 2002 model Toro Wheel Horse 522xi, which is a small, but heavy-duty garden tractor. It's been going strong since I bought it in 2008, and it will be ready for some cosmetic updating soon.
One of the things I use Wheel Horse for is repositioning our flat-bed trailer on our property. I fabricated a trailer hitch receiver (see below) that bolts onto the back of the tractor and is easily removable, although I haven't had occasion to remove it yet.
I should add that the trailer I move with the tractor does not put much tongue weight on the hitch.
My standard disclaimer: I do not guarantee the safety, efficacy, or applicability of any of my designs or ideas that I have described here in this thread. Any use of my designs or ideas is entirely at your own risk.
Thank you. It's just welded on both sides of the seam(s) and then ground by hand with a 4-1/2" angle grinder, which is one of my most-used tools. It's a common approach that I've used for making clean corners and edges on many projects, such as this one: https://www.garagejournal.com/forum/threads/show-us-your-welding-projects.121477/post-9950927Very nice fab; looks commercially-made. How did you get that crisp corner from the top plate to the side plates? Was that bent or welded from three pieces then ground/chamfered?
That's what I was just thinking when I looked at that.3 d printed end cap for the plug!
Now I have a reason to buy a 3D printer and start reading that thread3 d printed end cap for the plug!
I have a few cheesy plastic inserts that would fit but eh. Something custom printed would look better ....That's what I was just thinking when I looked at that.
To use stuff I have in hand I was thinking this as well. Cut a piece out to cover the hole and angle it so it meets the bottom of the skirt.I’d cut it at a 45 and weld a cap on it.




I dia similar mod on my ongoing trailer project. But instead of a plain cap it is a perfect spot from a clearance light one light does a rear and side light. Harry Sorry for the crappy pic.I’d cut it at a 45 and weld a cap on it.
Very nice. More details on the pressure washer grit blasting attachment please. Looking for alternatives to flap wheel.Here's another of my past welding projects. I fabricated this fire pit/fire box from 1/4" hot-rolled steel plate. It's very heavy, to say the least. After welding and grinding, I blasted it with coal slag using my pressure washer and a grit-blasting attachment, which removed every speck of mill scale and prepped the surface for the high-temperature paint. It has stood up very well. After about 8 years, there is still no rust on the box, other than in a few scratches where I brushed against it with the mowing deck, so the box has never needed to be repainted. I do touch up the paint on the screen once every couple of years. The grate inside the box is smaller than the inner dimensions of the fire box and raised up a few inches above the firebricks that are set into the bottom of the box, which allows good air circulation down around and up through the fire. I keep a small handle with a hook stashed under the fire box for lifting the screen off. I was going to weld a handle onto the screen, but I decided that I wanted to keep the clean lines uncluttered.
It gets used year around, even in the winter. Photo below, just getting a fire started while having a hot drink (buttered rum, if I recall) on a winter solstice evening.
Cheers!