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#1
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Hi, I am building some tables, stands and work benches. Not on a production capacity, but I have several planned. Mostly the corners will be in 14ga 2x1 HSS. Previously, I have mitered a top frame and then butt welded the legs to that. I am curious about a 3-axis corner where each member is mitered twice (Looks like this). The main advantage I see is less welding and less grinding to prep the leg attachment. Main disadvantage is extra miter cuts and the finesse of clamping and tacking it all square, ideally in one go. I just got a "dry" chop saw and am excited that it might make miter cuts more accurate and less time-consuming. However, I don't have a 3-axis corner clamp (like this). I am going to try cutting the miters and just using 3-4 magnets to tack it together, but is there a design for a simple jig that I could make to ensure the welded corners stay square? Or do you recommend just sticking to what I know and continue cutting the legs square and welding flush to the frame?
Last edited by sinthome; 11-09-2016 at 10:01 PM. |
#2
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Good question.
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* * The factory of the future will have only two employees, a man and a dog. The man will be there to feed the dog. The dog will be there to keep the man from touching the equipment. ~Warren G. Bennis |
#3
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Doable but why? All you will be adding is work and not strength. you could 45 the bottom corners.
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Drawing by Smartdraw |
#4
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All you need for a jig is to tack some pieces to your welding table then you can make as many as you want...
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Keith Measure twice and cut once...or...wait, was that the other way around? |
#5
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The 4 seconds you save grinding will probably be over shadowed by the extra three hours in setup time, don't forget the extra expense from the mis metered tubes.
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Walker Chief slag chipper and floor sweeper, Ironwood Artistic |
#6
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I honestly don't think you are going to save any time in the long run. You certainly aren't making anything stronger. I admit, if I were really really bored, and wanted to do it just to say I did, it might be fun to do - once. But I'm sure I would never do it again lol.
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I believe the appropriate metaphor here involves a river of excrement and a Native American water vessel without any means of propulsion. |
#7
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Octopussy comes to mind, you have to know how to deal with warping. You'll have to keep the clamps on until the joint completely cools.... and then still have to tweak the legs. I can hear from here the cussing and tools bouncing across the floor scaring off the poor shop dog.
Welding process, TIG? Down hand Mig? the bigger the welds the greater the heat. |
#8
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Tack enough so if the blade catches it won't pull it off the flat bar...
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"I was raised with you do things because its what you should do. I never expected anything in return." -----DozerDan |
#9
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If it were me. :-) (I don't do any welding) but the design of and building a "clamp" to hold it in position for the weld would be a fun thing to do. That is the kind of challenge that keeps me going. :-)
...lew... |
#10
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You can tell some things about a person by how they work, and how they work. ... Like firearm design, same task, many solutions. .
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"I was raised with you do things because its what you should do. I never expected anything in return." -----DozerDan |
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