DICKEYBIRD
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Sep 27, 2007
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- 653
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I convinced 'er indoors (wife, better half, etc. to my fellow yanks) that Santa needed to drop off a Harbor Freight carbide grinder this Christmas. http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/displayitem.taf?Itemnumber=46727
Being on vacation this week, I cobbled up a cabinet to mount it on from an old electronic rack unit a buddy gave me a while back. It was a beautiful piece of work and built like a brick outhouse. It was originally 76" tall and has double wheeled casters to support a heavy load. I think it's big enough to mount my bench grinder on and the disc sander I'm building as well.
I needed to chop it down to match the height of the worktable next to it but wasn't looking forward to cutting it apart with a hacksaw. There's numerous posts on the web about sawing aluminum with a carbide-tipped blade in a skilsaw so I decided now was the the time to try it. Man, does it work well; I was amazed! It's noisy as hell and the chips fly everywhere but I'm now a believer. I used an old saw I had lying around which still had a cheap carbide blade on it and am happy I tried it. Now I gotta figure out what to make from the 4 left-over pieces of heavy duty aluminum extrusion.
Once it was shortened and bolted back together, I installed the last remaining drawer I had left over from when our parts department at work upgraded their small parts cabinet 20 years ago and threw several of them in the dumpster. Me, frugal? Naah! I'm not sure what the final use of the drawer will be but for now it's my "small scraps drawer." I'm like Marv, it ain't scrap 'til it's weight gets down into the grams!
Oh, one last thing, a few years ago I drew a simple 2D CAD drawing of my garage-workshop and equipment (to scale) during a rearrangement project. My buddy & I's fishing boat and motor FINALLY sailed out of the garage and to its new berth so there was enough room to put things where they could actually be used.
Now, anytime a new addition to the shop is planned, I simply pull up the CAD file, draw the new item to scale and shift things around until things look right.
Being on vacation this week, I cobbled up a cabinet to mount it on from an old electronic rack unit a buddy gave me a while back. It was a beautiful piece of work and built like a brick outhouse. It was originally 76" tall and has double wheeled casters to support a heavy load. I think it's big enough to mount my bench grinder on and the disc sander I'm building as well.
I needed to chop it down to match the height of the worktable next to it but wasn't looking forward to cutting it apart with a hacksaw. There's numerous posts on the web about sawing aluminum with a carbide-tipped blade in a skilsaw so I decided now was the the time to try it. Man, does it work well; I was amazed! It's noisy as hell and the chips fly everywhere but I'm now a believer. I used an old saw I had lying around which still had a cheap carbide blade on it and am happy I tried it. Now I gotta figure out what to make from the 4 left-over pieces of heavy duty aluminum extrusion.
Once it was shortened and bolted back together, I installed the last remaining drawer I had left over from when our parts department at work upgraded their small parts cabinet 20 years ago and threw several of them in the dumpster. Me, frugal? Naah! I'm not sure what the final use of the drawer will be but for now it's my "small scraps drawer." I'm like Marv, it ain't scrap 'til it's weight gets down into the grams!
Oh, one last thing, a few years ago I drew a simple 2D CAD drawing of my garage-workshop and equipment (to scale) during a rearrangement project. My buddy & I's fishing boat and motor FINALLY sailed out of the garage and to its new berth so there was enough room to put things where they could actually be used.
Now, anytime a new addition to the shop is planned, I simply pull up the CAD file, draw the new item to scale and shift things around until things look right.