My first job in a welding shop was right out of high school in 1971. This was a huge shop and would be better called a manufacturing facility than a welding shop and I worked on the welding side of this shop. I worked with the same welder every day and he showed me as much as I could absorb, he was a great guy. One morning he tells me that they need me in another part of the shop for a week or two and told me who to ask for over there. We were all working on a job for McDonald Douglas at this time and I didn't understand exactly what it was we were building but at 18, I felt overwhelmed much of the time anyway. But I walk over to that department and know who I am reporting to since he's one of the owners and the guy who hired me. But he's standing on this huge sheet of plate that was at least 3/4" thick and probably 40' X 40' or even 60' X 40' and he has a magnetic drill in front of him. He asked if I knew what it was and I did but didn't know how they operate. So he sets it up and drills and taps a hole at the same time and I was flabbergasted! What a great idea! So he helped me set it up and drill and tap a few holes until he was fairly confident that I was OK on my own. Looking at this plate though, there were pilot holes every 4" or maybe 6" and I was to drill and tap every damn one of those holes! My excitement quickly waned about using this piece of equipment all day, every day for weeks to come. I can't remember the exact size of the tapped hole but it was at least 5/8" and may have even been 3/4" or 1". And I can't remember now just how many days I spent on this damn drill but I'll always remember the elation when I finally drilled that last hole. And I know that I broke at least one bit and that's when I learned they cost $50.00 each in 1971 money! But in my defense, I removed the bit from the chuck when it started getting dull and asked if I could have someone in the machine shop sharpen it for me. He looked at it and agreed that it looked like it was getting dull but he had new bits ordered and wanted me to keep using it like it was. Well, that bit didn't finish the day and that's when he told me how much they cost. But I'll give him credit for talking responsibility for it when his partner started to yell at me. He cut him off cold and told him that I had come to him earlier in the day with the dull bit and he told me to keep using it. I got to go back to my normal job for a few days. Every time I see a mag drill I remember this job! I hate monotonous work and back then I got bored very quickly. At lunch, I remember complaining to "my" welder about this boring damn job and all that he said was: " Hell Russ, it all pays the same, don't it?" And he's right, I got the same pay no matter what the job was that I was doing. That didn't make me magically start enjoying it but I knew that I had a good job, with good employers, and that drill was just "for now, not forever". So I stopped complaining and started working as hard as I could to get finished. And when all of the pieces were fabricated and painted I got to be in the crew that went out there and installed everything. I couldn't stop gawking at everything and would have loved to had the opportunity to tour that facility. Sorry about the long narrative, but like I said; every time I see one of those mag drills I remember.
My cousin made a comment to me one time, "work is work", along the same line as your welder said to you, "it all pays the same". That one comment from my cousin about 25 years ago totally changed the my perspective on working. Work is work, yes some is funner than other stuff, but it's all work that needs to be done.The more you complain the longer it's going to take.
I was gonna guess 664.75 lb. dang it!! Really good table man. I’ve had a 45 yr. career in welding/fabrication, and have gone through many workbenches... “It will Keel”! I’ve always wanted a Fit-up table, but now I’m just as fast without one. Now a Plasma CNC table and a Fit-up table ... that would be cool for the home shop just cuz I can would be super cool!!!
fantastic!! I am building a Welding table that is almost 2 inches thick for the top plate. I am debating how to make the frame and everything. I believe I found it with your video. Thank you
@@commoncents456 haha. It is only about 500 pounds. I had to leave it in the trailer while I swapped axles for a 4000 pound axle. I have a friend that has a skid loader so he can put it on top of a decent Rame.
Glad someone noticed that! I didn’t really talk about the top frame dimensions but i left a 2” edge around the whole thing so I could clamp easier. Having the tubing on the flat like that also helps get a clamp on there!
I seen a work table designed with movable casters. There were two cross bars on each end of the table, top one was welded in place, bottom was movable up and down and the casters were attached to lower one. There were two springs supporting the bottom crossbar and a small bottle jack was secured between the top and bottom bars. If you wanted to move the table you just pumped up the jack on each end of table which pushed the casters down to the floor. Roll the table to new location and release pressure in each jack, the springs pull the bottom bar up and the table sets on its legs which still have the leveling feature.
Nice table! Your videos really inspire me to get more into metalworking. I'm in the middle of switching careers, and seeing the work you do has helped me figure out what I want to do moving forward. Keep up the awesome work man!
one tip for your bandsaw mate is to move the guide rollers on your side of the blade as close as possible to your material and lock it, gives you square cuts if your saw is setup right, also cold cut saws are nice but from working in workshops all over the world bandsaws are the ticket, more versatile and you dont need a "milled edge" for fabricating just get within 1mm and off to the races.
Good tip! If i had to have just one, i would keep the bandsaw for sure. There is something nice about that cold saw though, man those cuts are perfect!!
Rainfall projects did a big welding table project that had an incorporated wheel-jack setup, might be worth a try over having to adjust all those legs each time
I grew up with Acorn tables. You cannot compare it to anything else. Very massive, very strong, very accurate. With the tooling available I could set up most anything. ,
I'd be afraid to even guess how much that entire table weighs, but would be great for holding and welding just about anything. Thank you for the review, very informative video.
4 foot by 2 foot frame, plus 4 inches of overhang, according to the 2 inch spacing of holes on the welding table and another comment below. I've been thinking about a very similar table for a while now, and wondering how thick I want the top, definitely wanted 5/8/16mm or thicker, 3/4/20mm seems like a good choice, any thicker would be just silly with a small top that big (similar to what I want). Those threads on the feet are probably M16x2 or maybe M16x1.5 - I'd worry about the bending moment on the threads if one side of the big round foot was on something a little higher. On another HEAVY project I built I used hardened ball bearings as a point loading mechanism under the 4 adjustable feet and that worked really well. Would probably do the same again on something like this, I think, but maybe skip the washers and make disks out of plate steel instead. I'd also want the wheels further out and likely on some mechanism to speed up the move/drop process for indoor/outdoor flow use.
Great job, thanks for sharing. Those casters are going to be working hard once you put a bunch of stuff on the shelf, like that anvil. I would have used much beefier ones.
Nice job. I have the plate on my hydraulic welding table held on like this. I wish I had tapped the top and bolted from the bottom, for a completely flat top.
agreed, thtere is always errors on each corner. by doing it this way you are not compounding those errors at each weld. You have a small error on one corner, an equal error on the adjacent corner and then what ever those errors are will be the same on the last two corners. You are not accumulating error, you have ONE level of error not one level of error added to each new corner which is what you would have if you welded round the circle.
Ive made my table more than 10 years ago 350 kg its made in square 80mm and 10mm plate he have a plate upsite and downsite he is 2000mm large too 500mm you can do with him what you will , good luck with your new table
Check around on craigslist and facebook marketplace for road plates, lots of times those are cheap and havy plate. Just got oto make sure they arent warped!
With those open hollow legs you could fill them with sand or concrete to add even more weight and it might help it stop ringing if you are beating on it.
Those overhanging feet? I am curious how your ankles and shins appreciate them here half a year later after many bumps and scrapes. I think I would have matched them in size to the legs with a bevel and just welded them from the side. Drilling and tapping is great for later adjustment, but I think I would have done it different. Drilling all the way through with tapping drill size. Then tapping the plate and putting in the bolts from the bottom. Three reasons for this. No need for all that countersinking and trimming the bolts to sit flush with the table is easy. If later you need to attach something to the table taking one screw out or extending one and attach with nuts gives you options. Last reason is like you said makes it possible to flip the plate, and if you measured precisely it is a simple flip and screw using existing holes.
Not sure if u will even see this since its an older video but I'm just curious why not use a horizontal band saw? I love mine especially since after I set the first cut up I don't have to change anything for the rest of the same parts I'm cutting... I so realize that the chop saw is faster but I just feel the bandsaw is superior...i would really like to hear your input on this...if you see it lol Note: 90% of what I'm cutting is round tubing from cro-mo rollcage tubing up to large aluminum intercooler piping...idk if that make a difference to you but figured I would add that
Here’s it in amazon, it’s expensive brand new but I got mine for about $125 used! Check Facebook marketplace for “stacker” I see them from time to time! amzn.to/3ppG5uN
I was curious if you have a link to the tap machine you used in your mag drill to thread those holes? Heck of an awesome table, that beast will last you for years.
My first job in a welding shop was right out of high school in 1971. This was a huge shop and would be better called a manufacturing facility than a welding shop and I worked on the welding side of this shop. I worked with the same welder every day and he showed me as much as I could absorb, he was a great guy. One morning he tells me that they need me in another part of the shop for a week or two and told me who to ask for over there. We were all working on a job for McDonald Douglas at this time and I didn't understand exactly what it was we were building but at 18, I felt overwhelmed much of the time anyway. But I walk over to that department and know who I am reporting to since he's one of the owners and the guy who hired me. But he's standing on this huge sheet of plate that was at least 3/4" thick and probably 40' X 40' or even 60' X 40' and he has a magnetic drill in front of him. He asked if I knew what it was and I did but didn't know how they operate. So he sets it up and drills and taps a hole at the same time and I was flabbergasted! What a great idea! So he helped me set it up and drill and tap a few holes until he was fairly confident that I was OK on my own. Looking at this plate though, there were pilot holes every 4" or maybe 6" and I was to drill and tap every damn one of those holes! My excitement quickly waned about using this piece of equipment all day, every day for weeks to come. I can't remember the exact size of the tapped hole but it was at least 5/8" and may have even been 3/4" or 1". And I can't remember now just how many days I spent on this damn drill but I'll always remember the elation when I finally drilled that last hole. And I know that I broke at least one bit and that's when I learned they cost $50.00 each in 1971 money! But in my defense, I removed the bit from the chuck when it started getting dull and asked if I could have someone in the machine shop sharpen it for me. He looked at it and agreed that it looked like it was getting dull but he had new bits ordered and wanted me to keep using it like it was. Well, that bit didn't finish the day and that's when he told me how much they cost. But I'll give him credit for talking responsibility for it when his partner started to yell at me. He cut him off cold and told him that I had come to him earlier in the day with the dull bit and he told me to keep using it. I got to go back to my normal job for a few days.
Every time I see a mag drill I remember this job! I hate monotonous work and back then I got bored very quickly. At lunch, I remember complaining to "my" welder about this boring damn job and all that he said was: " Hell Russ, it all pays the same, don't it?" And he's right, I got the same pay no matter what the job was that I was doing. That didn't make me magically start enjoying it but I knew that I had a good job, with good employers, and that drill was just "for now, not forever". So I stopped complaining and started working as hard as I could to get finished.
And when all of the pieces were fabricated and painted I got to be in the crew that went out there and installed everything. I couldn't stop gawking at everything and would have loved to had the opportunity to tour that facility.
Sorry about the long narrative, but like I said; every time I see one of those mag drills I remember.
My cousin made a comment to me one time, "work is work", along the same line as your welder said to you, "it all pays the same". That one comment from my cousin about 25 years ago totally changed the my perspective on working. Work is work, yes some is funner than other stuff, but it's all work that needs to be done.The more you complain the longer it's going to take.
Thanks for the story.
Write book dude. At least you get some money by selling it instead teling your life story here for free.
Finally a metal channel that doesn't look like an operating room. Very nice and a cool workshop. Regards from Germany
We do many home projects, and these sawhorses are great for so many different applications. Glad we purchased them.
Great tip about the position of the nuts for load bearing on the legs. Great vid, thanks Chris.
I was gonna guess 664.75 lb. dang it!! Really good table man. I’ve had a 45 yr. career in welding/fabrication, and have gone through many workbenches... “It will Keel”! I’ve always wanted a Fit-up table, but now I’m just as fast without one. Now a Plasma CNC table and a Fit-up table ... that would be cool for the home shop just cuz I can would be super cool!!!
I decided 2 weeks ago that welding is my new skill to learn , and I think I have found my teacher. Great video , thumbs up and subscribed .
Production, narration cadence, and even physical appearance just like Matt Cremona. Both excellent content creators. Thanks for your contribution!
fantastic!! I am building a Welding table that is almost 2 inches thick for the top plate. I am debating how to make the frame and everything. I believe I found it with your video. Thank you
2" thick
I'm not sure if dump truck bodies are that thick.
The frame might have to be a forklift.
Wheels might come from the rail yard
@@commoncents456 haha. It is only about 500 pounds. I had to leave it in the trailer while I swapped axles for a 4000 pound axle. I have a friend that has a skid loader so he can put it on top of a decent Rame.
Very enjoyable and interesting to watch you create your table. Thanks for producing and sharing it.
I like that you left a clamping edge! you see a lot with the frame all the way out making the tables a little harder to use.
Glad someone noticed that! I didn’t really talk about the top frame dimensions but i left a 2” edge around the whole thing so I could clamp easier. Having the tubing on the flat like that also helps get a clamp on there!
Now flush mount your vice under the table too
I seen a work table designed with movable casters. There were two cross bars on each end of the table, top one was welded in place, bottom was movable up and down and the casters were attached to lower one. There were two springs supporting the bottom crossbar and a small bottle jack was secured between the top and bottom bars. If you wanted to move the table you just pumped up the jack on each end of table which pushed the casters down to the floor. Roll the table to new location and release pressure in each jack, the springs pull the bottom bar up and the table sets on its legs which still have the leveling feature.
Now, you can make one for the kitchen.
Excellent creativity.
Nice table! Your videos really inspire me to get more into metalworking. I'm in the middle of switching careers, and seeing the work you do has helped me figure out what I want to do moving forward. Keep up the awesome work man!
Thanks for watching! Thats what I like to hear! Do what you enjoy! Good luck!
awesome video! I'm building a welding table currently from 14G 2x2 & using a 1/4" plate. lots of great tips here that will improve my project.
Absolutely incredible work sir and excellent job. I would give nearly anything to own a table like that.
Really excellent video. Good photography and explanation.
Great looking welding /workbench. You have a quick analytical mind for your shop construction. 👍
Thank you! Thanks for watching!
That center bar chop, made me subscribe. Well done sir.
This goes to show, true craftsmanship.
Thanks for watching!!
one tip for your bandsaw mate is to move the guide rollers on your side of the blade as close as possible to your material and lock it, gives you square cuts if your saw is setup right, also cold cut saws are nice but from working in workshops all over the world bandsaws are the ticket, more versatile and you dont need a "milled edge" for fabricating just get within 1mm and off to the races.
Good tip! If i had to have just one, i would keep the bandsaw for sure. There is something nice about that cold saw though, man those cuts are perfect!!
Man that turned out really nice. This channel is a little bit out of my league but it’s still cool to watch and learn.
Rainfall projects did a big welding table project that had an incorporated wheel-jack setup, might be worth a try over having to adjust all those legs each time
That punch is AWESOME!
I grew up with Acorn tables. You cannot compare it to anything else. Very massive, very strong, very accurate. With the tooling available I could set up most anything.
,
Great video and a really nice table build. I can't imagine how nice it would be to own a table like that. But even the anvil is flippin awesome.
Thank you very much!
I’m watching this again after near on a year. Great design.
Well done sir!
you could fill the leg with sand to get it even more heavier and dampen the sound
I would have bet any amount of money that someone would make this comment. 🤑
I'd be afraid to even guess how much that entire table weighs, but would be great for holding and welding just about anything. Thank you for the review, very informative video.
Awesome table. Wish I was closer to take some classes.
Well done sir I enjoyed the video and I loved your idea making it Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!!
4 foot by 2 foot frame, plus 4 inches of overhang, according to the 2 inch spacing of holes on the welding table and another comment below. I've been thinking about a very similar table for a while now, and wondering how thick I want the top, definitely wanted 5/8/16mm or thicker, 3/4/20mm seems like a good choice, any thicker would be just silly with a small top that big (similar to what I want). Those threads on the feet are probably M16x2 or maybe M16x1.5 - I'd worry about the bending moment on the threads if one side of the big round foot was on something a little higher. On another HEAVY project I built I used hardened ball bearings as a point loading mechanism under the 4 adjustable feet and that worked really well. Would probably do the same again on something like this, I think, but maybe skip the washers and make disks out of plate steel instead. I'd also want the wheels further out and likely on some mechanism to speed up the move/drop process for indoor/outdoor flow use.
Awesome! Man it sure helps to have all the right tools. 👍🏼
I heard that I did just get 240 in my garage so that’s a start
Excellent video my friend!!!!
Awesome table. Love the countersunk fasteners. 👍😎
Thanks me too!!
What size were those bolts?
That table is awesome!!! Nocely done!!
Love the perm machine at 8:45
Awesome build mate
I'm a passive viewer. It's nice to finally see you work for once instead of always talking :p
Great job, thanks for sharing. Those casters are going to be working hard once you put a bunch of stuff on the shelf, like that anvil. I would have used much beefier ones.
Great job! Thanks for sharing! 🤙🏻
Thanks for watching!
Nice job.
I have the plate on my hydraulic welding table held on like this. I wish I had tapped the top and bolted from the bottom, for a completely flat top.
* As soon as he puts an exactly 1 pound piece of steel on this table, it completes the weight of 666lb and the portal to hell is opened *
👹👹👹
What about a pound of feathers?
Great video! I need to build a welding table this summer.
It’s going to be a great addition!!
Just built a welding table not like this 1 but a welding table and she came out nicely
👍👍😎👍👍. Thanks fo much for all the details. It has helped me decide a better workflow and use of my equipment. 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
Always good to weld your corners going towards the same direction on all corners to help keep square
Nice work. Love your work ethic. Great job
Great Vid Chris!
Thanks Phil!
Awesome table.
Thanks for watching!
Those million dollar precision tables I bet are sweet!
The table is about $5,000 but honestly for the quality and ability to weld repeatable shapes with ease it’s worth it!
@@MakeEverything Nice but I bet the extras are not cheap. I just wish I could convince the wife I need one.
Wow… really nice table!
agreed, thtere is always errors on each corner. by doing it this way you are not compounding those errors at each weld. You have a small error on one corner, an equal error on the adjacent corner and then what ever those errors are will be the same on the last two corners.
You are not accumulating error, you have ONE level of error not one level of error added to each new corner which is what you would have if you welded round the circle.
Great narration
Get a coat of paint on everything but the top. That's a great rough work bench man.✌
Tapping with a mag drill? Thanks, know I have to add both to my wish list.
Its life changing!
Clean job.
Thanks!
I will take 3!
It would be cool to have Jack’s build into it.
Ive been thinking about how to do it!
Ive made my table more than 10 years ago 350 kg its made in square 80mm and 10mm plate he have a plate upsite and downsite he is 2000mm large too 500mm you can do with him what you will , good luck with your new table
You have all the cool tools man. Jellen
Good job.
That cutting method you used, was that Cobra Kai inspired? Great job on the table. Thoroughly enjoyed it!
Nice work.
Love the video mate 👍🏻
Thank you!
Looks good
1st time watching, subbed!! Can't wait to see more!
Thank you! Lots more to come!
What a sick workbench. Great video.
Great job!
I want to ma,e a tabke like this, just keeping an eye out for a large plate steel for the right price
Check around on craigslist and facebook marketplace for road plates, lots of times those are cheap and havy plate. Just got oto make sure they arent warped!
Thanks I'll try the metal salvage yard I do work in sometimes too they might have some lying around
With those open hollow legs you could fill them with sand or concrete to add even more weight and it might help it stop ringing if you are beating on it.
I had a thought to do that, but with the threaded post legs I didn't want the sand to kill those threads, good idea though!
@@MakeEverything yeah, I suppose you would have needed to stuff the bottom of each leg with foam or something to protect the threads.
we enjoyed this video
The square plates on the ends of the legs look like they would bite your ankles.
They are pretty far inbound but I do think I’ll be grinding those corners a little more in the future!
Just wear 7 pairs of socks
Nice video
nice table
Thanks!
I'd like one of those. If mine, I'd round the corners a bit.
Those overhanging feet? I am curious how your ankles and shins appreciate them here half a year later after many bumps and scrapes. I think I would have matched them in size to the legs with a bevel and just welded them from the side.
Drilling and tapping is great for later adjustment, but I think I would have done it different. Drilling all the way through with tapping drill size. Then tapping the plate and putting in the bolts from the bottom. Three reasons for this. No need for all that countersinking and trimming the bolts to sit flush with the table is easy. If later you need to attach something to the table taking one screw out or extending one and attach with nuts gives you options. Last reason is like you said makes it possible to flip the plate, and if you measured precisely it is a simple flip and screw using existing holes.
That is amazing.
Really great content mate only just started to follow you 👍👍👍👍
nice job
Thank you! Cheers!
I was guessing 675 lb great job
Nice table
7:40 👍
Nice video where did you get the hold downs from
Not sure if u will even see this since its an older video but I'm just curious why not use a horizontal band saw? I love mine especially since after I set the first cut up I don't have to change anything for the rest of the same parts I'm cutting... I so realize that the chop saw is faster but I just feel the bandsaw is superior...i would really like to hear your input on this...if you see it lol
Note: 90% of what I'm cutting is round tubing from cro-mo rollcage tubing up to large aluminum intercooler piping...idk if that make a difference to you but figured I would add that
Ask us to guess the weight after putting it in the title.
🤦🏻♂️
I have a 35 ton press I wonder if I can get dies to punch holes?
Yeah I welded some zinc and I was outdoors, got a headache, welder friend told me drink some milk 🥛, and yep that worked.
Can you shoot me a link for your countersink? or add it to your vid description?
13:09 Do you have a link for that manual forklift? Thanks!
Here’s it in amazon, it’s expensive brand new but I got mine for about $125 used! Check Facebook marketplace for “stacker” I see them from time to time! amzn.to/3ppG5uN
Can you give a cost of materials estimate,please? Great video, a little bit of a over kill for my shop!
The plate was about $300 and the rest
Of the steel and hardware probably another $300 all said and done. Plus time 😵
Is that new table the same height as your strong hands table ?
Hello, I would like to ask what type of steel do you use for the plate on the table? Please if you can answer me ..
thank you very much..
That is an overkill. You can use and abuse it, it will still stand the test of time, super!
I head and beat on it and its been great!!!
I still need to make my table. Can I pass ideas past you? My table top is 7/8in but I wish it was 1in.
I was curious if you have a link to the tap machine you used in your mag drill to thread those holes? Heck of an awesome table, that beast will last you for years.
Hey, Do you still make the Boxwood Hedge Walls?
Yes i do! Shoot me an email, info@makeeverythingshop.com
I might have missed it in the video. What was your total cost for the build?
Probably around $400, I got the plate from my friend @paulpinto and the tube was stuff I had around.
Is your old certiflat for sale?
I actually brought it over to a friends shop where I do a lot of on site welding, so it’ll be used there in the future.
smart build! Add a "toe lifter", so you don't have to grab that jack ery time. Using your imagination.
Describe this in more detail please?
Got a link to that countersink?
How big is your shop?