So this afternoon provided me with a happy combination of need, bits, and opportunity. As many of you are aware, my collection of Vice Grips tends to grow periodically, according to either need or some kind of mechanical hanky-panky while I am away from the shop.
Back an unknown number of pages ago. another contributor to this board suggested a use for a surplus towel bar that he had had left over from a bathroom reno. Summarily he took the bar and screwed it to a nearby vertical surface and it became a hanger for all his pairs of vicegrips to hang from. Neat thinks I, something to keep mind.
Now access to the walls in my shop is marginal at best; most of them are covered by shelves or blocked by large objests like benches or compressors or presses or racks. For that reason, my shop press has become the surrogate shop mama for all my pairs of vicegrips. The press can be hard to see simply because it has become festooned by them. Recently I did a picto-mentary about a modification to the press that would eliminate all the wrestling attached to having to move the press deck by hand. Which gave me something of an idea. "Could I hang a towel bar off the floating press deck and have that be my go to place to hang most of my pairs of vice grips?" Only complication was the question of whether I had a towel bar that was narrow enough to mount on the lower flange of the floating deck. Turns out I did.
For the actual method of attaching it, as things further turned out, I had leftover tabs from the posts that I made to repair the garden enclosure. By some weird coincidence the bolt c-c for them matched the hole pattern in the mounts for the towel bar. Only minor mod was to oversize the holes to 1/.4 inch in the towel bar and 17/64's in the tabs to give some wiggle room when the time came to marry A, to B. The tabs were 1/8 plate and the press deck is 1/4 wall heavy channel so the MIG solved the problem by being set to 3/16ths and going for a heavy burn.
After that it was a few minutes of 4.5 mini-grinder work to dress the welds and some leftover black paint to make it all look like factory. For the fasteners, I dug around in my basement bolt cases, actually looking for some flat head stove bolts but instead scored by finding some coarse thread Flat head 1/4 inch machine screws. Had the nuts and locks already in the shop so together it all went.
Now, instead of the press deck being totally obscured by an abundance of pairs of Vice-grips, they, along with some screw clamps, all hang off the lower flange of the deck on the towel bar that is mounted to a pair of flat plate tabs that I just happened to have on hand as leftovers from another project. The press deck lifting winch that I added to the press during the winter is free to lift and drop the deck; there is no interference and the deck can actually sink to the lowest available position and the Vee-gees will remain where they are, on the bar.
All this made me so happy that I then proceeded to start assembling all the dead metal that had been accumulating and piling it at the main door. Tomorrow is a run to the recyclers to get rid of it all; the washer still needs to be dissected down to its nuts and bolts; think my mini-grinder and a razor wheel will be the tool of choice for that job. Time and past to get rid of it too. Salvage the transmission and the rest of it can become a chassis for an EV Prius.
Oh, the pictures? An afterthought that I was able to add in thanks to "edit". Amazing how fast stuff can migrate from other places when it senses fresh new space to inhabit.
Nick
Back an unknown number of pages ago. another contributor to this board suggested a use for a surplus towel bar that he had had left over from a bathroom reno. Summarily he took the bar and screwed it to a nearby vertical surface and it became a hanger for all his pairs of vicegrips to hang from. Neat thinks I, something to keep mind.
Now access to the walls in my shop is marginal at best; most of them are covered by shelves or blocked by large objests like benches or compressors or presses or racks. For that reason, my shop press has become the surrogate shop mama for all my pairs of vicegrips. The press can be hard to see simply because it has become festooned by them. Recently I did a picto-mentary about a modification to the press that would eliminate all the wrestling attached to having to move the press deck by hand. Which gave me something of an idea. "Could I hang a towel bar off the floating press deck and have that be my go to place to hang most of my pairs of vice grips?" Only complication was the question of whether I had a towel bar that was narrow enough to mount on the lower flange of the floating deck. Turns out I did.
For the actual method of attaching it, as things further turned out, I had leftover tabs from the posts that I made to repair the garden enclosure. By some weird coincidence the bolt c-c for them matched the hole pattern in the mounts for the towel bar. Only minor mod was to oversize the holes to 1/.4 inch in the towel bar and 17/64's in the tabs to give some wiggle room when the time came to marry A, to B. The tabs were 1/8 plate and the press deck is 1/4 wall heavy channel so the MIG solved the problem by being set to 3/16ths and going for a heavy burn.
After that it was a few minutes of 4.5 mini-grinder work to dress the welds and some leftover black paint to make it all look like factory. For the fasteners, I dug around in my basement bolt cases, actually looking for some flat head stove bolts but instead scored by finding some coarse thread Flat head 1/4 inch machine screws. Had the nuts and locks already in the shop so together it all went.
Now, instead of the press deck being totally obscured by an abundance of pairs of Vice-grips, they, along with some screw clamps, all hang off the lower flange of the deck on the towel bar that is mounted to a pair of flat plate tabs that I just happened to have on hand as leftovers from another project. The press deck lifting winch that I added to the press during the winter is free to lift and drop the deck; there is no interference and the deck can actually sink to the lowest available position and the Vee-gees will remain where they are, on the bar.
All this made me so happy that I then proceeded to start assembling all the dead metal that had been accumulating and piling it at the main door. Tomorrow is a run to the recyclers to get rid of it all; the washer still needs to be dissected down to its nuts and bolts; think my mini-grinder and a razor wheel will be the tool of choice for that job. Time and past to get rid of it too. Salvage the transmission and the rest of it can become a chassis for an EV Prius.
Oh, the pictures? An afterthought that I was able to add in thanks to "edit". Amazing how fast stuff can migrate from other places when it senses fresh new space to inhabit.
Nick
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