It’s a cool little thing. Very handy when I’m doing bits of tin work.Nice benchtop anvil.
I’ve ordered one on eBay but it won’t be here until next week so the spade connectors are just tiding me over for the moment.Would a nice 3D printed DeWalt battery holder stuck on the side be better?
Little windmill on the sands at kirkudbright. Lovely here today 23 degrees on the beachView attachment 464143View attachment 464145
Tried it today with some 4mm I cut on the plasma, filed no problem. Been trying to upload a vid to youtube since this morning but something is wrong with youtube as it is not uploading and I have tried both at the workshop and at home, so not my router..On a tangent on that topic, does plasma cutting stainless harden the cut edge making it a grinding task to dress the edge, or would a file be able to dress the edge?
Tried it today with some 4mm I cut on the plasma, filed no problem.
Without a video how do we know it works?
What a cracking job. Well done mateToday I made a 600mm capicity tile cutting saw able to cut 1500mm wide slabs.
I've been messing about with this on and off for over a week but finally got it working today.
View attachment 464366
I have a dozen granite slabs that were destined for the skip and so followed me home.
I have been putting off using them to replace the concrete slabs on our front and rear steps.
I could have just used an angle grinder or petrol saw but they are 40mm thick, there are lots of cuts and I knew I wouldn't be able to do a tidy job without a proper guide so when a wet overhead tile saw came up locally for £150 I thought I'd give it a go.
It an Einkell STR 250 similar to the one below.
The bridge is almost 900mm long and allows cuts of 570mm to be made in one pass, but you can't get anything much bigger than 600 into it and I needed more.
I only used the the saw, carriage and water pump for this project, but I can turn it back into a standard tile saw in 10mins
I made a frame out of scaffold tube, 2 inch angle and other scrap I have, to cantilever the saw blade 750mm clear of the back supports (the slabs are 1335 long by 730 wide) which allows me to cut anything up to 1500mm wide and "in theory" unlimited length.
View attachment 464371
The backsupports are inch and half solid bar which fits inside the scaffold tube and is clamped with 10mm bolts so the height is adjustable. I bolted where I could so it would come apart for storage.
View attachment 464373
I used a mix of tig and stick (tig inside, stick outside) and one of the slabs was brought into service for setting out. I also used one of @pressbrake1 heavy-duty squares to keep things in check during welding.
View attachment 464372
View attachment 464374
I also had to make additional tables to support the slabs during cutting. The front table is separate and I made it 450mm square, so it can be used to hold the nice granite surface plate I got from @Pete. when this job is done, instead of on the tool cabinet it currently sits on.
View attachment 464395
I made HDME blocks to support the slabs because it's what I had and made the legs adjustable with 16mm thread bar.
View attachment 464375
It's a bit of a clatch but it does the job well enough.
View attachment 464396
It might even get a lick of paint at some stage. View attachment 464377
Heat transfer vinylWhat's HTV?
Today I made a 600mm capicity tile cutting saw able to cut 1500mm wide slabs.
I've been messing about with this on and off for over a week but finally got it working today.
View attachment 464366
I have a dozen granite slabs that were destined for the skip and so followed me home.
I have been putting off using them to replace the concrete slabs on our front and rear steps.
I could have just used an angle grinder or petrol saw but they are 40mm thick, there are lots of cuts and I knew I wouldn't be able to do a tidy job without a proper guide so when a wet overhead tile saw came up locally for £150 I thought I'd give it a go.
It an Einkell STR 250 similar to the one below.
The bridge is almost 900mm long and allows cuts of 570mm to be made in one pass, but you can't get anything much bigger than 600 into it and I needed more.
I only used the the saw, carriage and water pump for this project, but I can turn it back into a standard tile saw in 10mins
I made a frame out of scaffold tube, 2 inch angle and other scrap I have, to cantilever the saw blade 750mm clear of the back supports (the slabs are 1335 long by 730 wide) which allows me to cut anything up to 1500mm wide and "in theory" unlimited length.
View attachment 464371
The backsupports are inch and half solid bar which fits inside the scaffold tube and is clamped with 10mm bolts so the height is adjustable. I bolted where I could so it would come apart for storage.
View attachment 464373
I used a mix of tig and stick (tig inside, stick outside) and one of the slabs was brought into service for setting out. I also used one of @pressbrake1 heavy-duty squares to keep things in check during welding.
View attachment 464372
View attachment 464374
I also had to make additional tables to support the slabs during cutting. The front table is separate and I made it 450mm square, so it can be used to hold the nice granite surface plate I got from @Pete. when this job is done, instead of on the tool cabinet it currently sits on.
View attachment 464395
I made HDME blocks to support the slabs because it's what I had and made the legs adjustable with 16mm thread bar.
View attachment 464375
It's a bit of a clatch but it does the job well enough.
View attachment 464396
It might even get a lick of paint at some stage. View attachment 464377