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Workbench Trailer Hitch Question

TipsyMcStagger

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Sep 5, 2006
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FL Gulf Coast & NYC
I'm about to start building a bench so I bought a couple of 3500lb bumper hitches from HF and had a 3/4" nut welded to the side so I can tighten down on the receiver tube to prevent wobble. One hitch will be on each end of the bench, so I had the nut welded on opposite sides on each hitch. I also had them cut away one of the safety chain loops to facilitate easier access to the pinch bolt. They even shot it with some rattle can black. Not bad for $20 for both!

For those with a similar setup, are you using the hitch mount vice plate HF sells for you vice, grinder, buffer, etc. or did you get a standard receiver tube like this one and weld a mounting plate to it?

Tipsy

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bad5x8

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Jan 22, 2005
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Liberty MO
I have a hitch mount on my bench and I built my own mounts for a vise and for a bench grinder out of 3/16 inch square and plate. Works well.
 

atavuss

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Aug 14, 2010
Messages
37
I took a 3' length of 2" and welded a plate to the top of it, the entire thing is powder coated and bolted to the side of my bench. The vice is bolted to the plate on top. Sturdy and cheap!
 

jesse72

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Sep 26, 2011
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California
Thanks for sharing, I don't have a receiver set up yet but yours answered a few questions for me!
 

JDMopar

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May 6, 2007
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Asheville,NC
Thanks for your post. It rattled a few brain cells, and I thought of a good way to mount my new vice with a receiver like the one in your pics. My work bench is on pallet racking, with storage overhead and underneath. I will get a piece of scrap 1/2 inch thick flat plate to weld the receiver to, and bolt it to the side of the pallet racking near my blast cabinet. Then I can mount the vice so I can remove it and get it out of the way when I don't need it. Thanks again! :bowdown:
 

shooting4life

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Nov 19, 2012
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334
I just used the mounted piece hf sells. It works without a problem, but I am not a super heavy vise user.
 

drivesitfar

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Pacific Northwest
I started a thread looking for ideas about how to mount vises and grinders like this so here's the link. http://www.garagejournal.com/forum/showthread.php?t=252799&highlight=vise+stands

i'm hoping to have several grinders with different wheels sitting on the shelf so i can save a little floor space and not have to change wheels in the middle of a job. same with having a few options with vises.


i'm thinking of building the white table in the picture i'm posting with a few more options put on it because i like how it can be moved if i need to. i'll put a few hitch type attachments on it like the other benches i'm posting pictures of and also a few extra bars to put clamps and other things on.
 

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87jeepwrangler

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May 23, 2013
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i'm hoping to have several grinders with different wheels sitting on the shelf so i can save a little floor space and not have to change wheels in the middle of a job.

it wouldn't work for vises, but have you given any thought to some type of stand that stores the grinders in a vertical fashion? i've given that some thought as i'm in a similar boat as you, just haven't had time to execute it.

if it easily raised and lowered (maybe similar to a drywall lift), it wouldn't take up any more floor space than 1 stand, and you wouldn't have to physically lift them every time.

put your buffing wheels on the upper most grinder, scotchbrite/wire wheels on the middle grinder, and traditional grinding wheels on the bottom (cleanest to dirtiest).
 
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drivesitfar

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87: i'm not sure why you think the hitch mounts won't work for a vise and would like to hear more of your thoughts on that. i'm not going to use a hitch mount for any of my big vises that weigh over 100 pounds, but the smaller ones that have different uses i'm going to.

any pictures of a drywall lift or of a grinder station you are talking about because i'm all ears to save a little of my shop's floor space. i'm also thinking of mounting the grinders on a piece of plywood with a 2 x 2 or 2 x 4 screwed to the base that i can put in a wood vise mounted to my wood bench. i don't mind a little exercise taking the grinders on and off the shelf next to it, but always looking to see what the other guy's use or think of.
 

sberry

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Personally think its a lot of effort into something that eventually finds its own level and ends up like the first and last pic above, only difference is I nick the corner of the bench to round it. All the tubes make it look obsessive compulsive that cant make up their minds.
As for tubes, some supply houses carry it and available in plain versions at truck and trailer store.
 

sberry

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I really like the one in the last pic. Its in the best or top 5 I have seen since being on the net despite how much they cost, how many tubes or how many holes or slots.
If it found a home could be bolted down but chances are fully loaded its pretty stable and the vise is right, over a corner over a post on the bench.
Even at that might have skipped all but 1 adjuster and made it portable by pallet jack? It can be loaded with wah more tools. ha but the fundamentals are super.
I like pic 6 pretty well too.
 
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k-os

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Dec 29, 2012
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995
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WI
I used the hitch mount plate from HF for my Craftsman vise and have a second one to mount my bench grinder to once I move everything into the new place. Had the bracket welded up at work to mount the receiver to my bench.



 

CNGsaves

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Sep 26, 2012
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Like the idea of hitch mount vise, etc . . . . but don't you guys get movement just like the slop that happens with trailer hitch?? I always want a vise to be super solid.

Wish the bolts were tapered and two piece where one side screwed into the other side in middle. Would be same strength as bolt would be solid at pressure point. Problem I foresee is how to remove the two pieces, once they were stuck in there tight? Nut may need a small cutout so hybrid bolt ends could be pried out? :dunno:
 

Crusarius

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Aug 22, 2013
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Upstate NY
I don't have pictures of this thought so I will try to explain it as clear as I can.

Trailer spindle mounted to wall / bench. old wheel that bolts to it with 3 flat plates welded to the area where the tire would normally be creating a triangle. mount one grinder to each of the flat plates. now you have all three grinders that takes up space of one you just rotate to the selected grinder you need.

in lieu of a spindle on the wall you could just use a piece of tubing. then you can have a set screw to hold it in place.
 

87jeepwrangler

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May 23, 2013
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87: i'm not sure why you think the hitch mounts won't work for a vise and would like to hear more of your thoughts on that. i'm not going to use a hitch mount for any of my big vises that weigh over 100 pounds, but the smaller ones that have different uses i'm going to.

any pictures of a drywall lift or of a grinder station you are talking about because i'm all ears to save a little of my shop's floor space. i'm also thinking of mounting the grinders on a piece of plywood with a 2 x 2 or 2 x 4 screwed to the base that i can put in a wood vise mounted to my wood bench. i don't mind a little exercise taking the grinders on and off the shelf next to it, but always looking to see what the other guy's use or think of.


perhaps i wasn't clear in what i was trying to say. what i was trying to convey, was to consider the idea of a telescoping stand for your bench grinders. a telescoping stand would more than likely not be realistic for bench vises. the vise in a hitch method is awesome. i have many of my own vises in hitch mounts, as well as some other tools that make my bench more versatile. it works great; especially on sub 100lb vises.


back to telescoping bench vise stand... the footprint would be such that it would be similar to a single stand, but would have all of your bench grinders on it, thereby making it a more efficient space. there are many viable lift mechanisms that could be considered, i threw drywall lift as one such example, and probably one of the cheapest methods to execute. obviously other lift mechanisms could be considered (acme thread, electric actuator, hydraulic, etc).

obviously the previously mentioned methods of making a stand with a receiver and interchangeable bench grinders is much simpler, but then you have to physically lift the grinders and plug/unplug them every time you use a different one. if you're that hard up for floor space, and willing to spend the time, i believe a telescoping stand is both possible and reasonable if built right.
grinder stand.jpg
 

87jeepwrangler

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May 23, 2013
Messages
195
Like the idea of hitch mount vise, etc . . . . but don't you guys get movement just like the slop that happens with trailer hitch?? I always want a vise to be super solid.

movement, yes. mine has a 1/2"-13 set screw in the side, which reduces movement, but doesn't eliminate it if you really start prying on it.

the hitch method is, in my opinion, good as a small/medium duty holder. any machine or tool requiring a real brute strength mount (tube benders, large vises, etc) should be permanently mounted to the workbench and/or floor.
 

shooting4life

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Joined
Nov 19, 2012
Messages
334
Like the idea of hitch mount vise, etc . . . . but don't you guys get movement just like the slop that happens with trailer hitch?? I always want a vise to be super solid.

Wish the bolts were tapered and two piece where one side screwed into the other side in middle. Would be same strength as bolt would be solid at pressure point. Problem I foresee is how to remove the two pieces, once they were stuck in there tight? Nut may need a small cutout so hybrid bolt ends could be pried out? :dunno:

I welded 5/8 nuts (I think 5/8, might have been 3/4, don't remember) to the side and bottom of the hitch. I then tighten the screws into the receiver and it prevents all movement. Then just need to loosen them a bit and I can change out the hitch. Also, I don't have a massive vise and I don't do a lot of banging so for heavier duty applications this might not be the best setup, but for my needs it works great.
 
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