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I have been looking to buy a small (2'x4' or so) welding table and I ran across this:http://www.ebay.com/itm/Heavy-Duty-2...item4d363f9b3dAnyone here try one? Seems like a decent table for what I need. I'm just going to be doing small projects at home so I don't really need a heavy duty table. I've also been looking at a folding Miller Arcstation if anyone has any feedback on those. Thanks
Reply:Originally Posted by Beemer533I have been looking to buy a small (2'x4' or so) welding table and I ran across this:http://www.ebay.com/itm/Heavy-Duty-2...item4d363f9b3dAnyone here try one? Seems like a decent table for what I need. I'm just going to be doing small projects at home so I don't really need a heavy duty table. I've also been looking at a folding Miller Arcstation if anyone has any feedback on those. Thanks
Reply:from what i could gather the table is 3/16" thick. if that's so i don't think it will stay flat for very long.i.u.o.e. # 15queens, ny and sunny fla
Reply:Originally Posted by docwelderfrom what i could gather the table is 3/16" thick. if that's so i don't think it will stay flat for very long.
Reply:I just received a custom designed 4' by 8' table with an 8" apron on all four sides. The surface is 1/4" thick but there is a 5" x 1/4" web structure underneath to keep it flat. I did not assemble the table yet but the customer service was excellent. I have two strong hand tables at work. I decided to go with tab and slot for my own shop. I will post up some pictures when I get it assembled.Last edited by Jds2835; 08-17-2015 at 07:32 PM.
Reply:Does those certiflat tab and slot tables come with any clamps and fixtures? The fixture point tables by stronghand comes with clamps and fixtures for either round or square tubing. Just food for thought if you hadn't bought it yet.
Reply:Originally Posted by golfingweldorDoes those certiflat tab and slot tables come with any clamps and fixtures? The fixture point tables by stronghand comes with clamps and fixtures for either round or square tubing. Just food for thought if you hadn't bought it yet.
Reply:A 2x3 piece of 3/16 for $300 is pretty pricey! I just bought a 5x10 and a 4x5 sheet for $250ish for a job. Why don't you go to your local steel supplier and buy a nice piece of 1/2" in the size you want? Fixture table are way overrated in my opinion. Buy your own plate, don't strip the carbon off the top (the black mill scale is very hard and is like a wear surface, it also resists welding BBs). If you think you need holes, buy/rent/borrow a mag drill and drill some holes. Build yourself a nice stout frame, angle iron is best in my experience for the top frame, and some 4" square for the legs. You are money ahead, and have a much stouter table. I can buy large rems of 1/2" for .40 cents per pound, 1/2" is 20 pounds per square foot, so a 2x4 of 1/2" is roughly $64. So your build cost is much lower. A mag drill might cost $40 a day to rent, plus the steel for the legs, add on another $40, and you are into your table for $144. Personally, 40"x60" is about the smallest table that I would find useful. Also, I would skip all the holes. Tack things to the table, or build clamps with a foot that you tack to the table. I have been doing that for over 10 years on mine and it has not made the surface wavy or unusable. Is it ideal? No, but at $64 for your size top, just replace it every 10 years or so if it gets bad.
Reply:Crikey! $.40 a pound! That's like the good old days. What are they charging for shapes? Man oh man, I got charged $.99 for some dang .060 drop off the back of the shear just for practice stuff the other day.DanI hope that when i'm dead and gone, people will remember me and think; "Boy, that guy sure owed me a lot of money!"
Reply:I went with a 5/8" 4x4 table, about $1/lb CDN. It actually got flatter by stitching it onto the base. Half that thickness would be about half as useful.SqWave 200Millermatic 190Airco 200 ACHypertherm PM45Boice-Crane Band SawVictor O/A
Reply:Originally Posted by walkerA 2x3 piece of 3/16 for $300 is pretty pricey! I just bought a 5x10 and a 4x5 sheet for $250ish for a job. Why don't you go to your local steel supplier and buy a nice piece of 1/2" in the size you want? Fixture table are way overrated in my opinion. Buy your own plate, don't strip the carbon off the top (the black mill scale is very hard and is like a wear surface, it also resists welding BBs). If you think you need holes, buy/rent/borrow a mag drill and drill some holes. Build yourself a nice stout frame, angle iron is best in my experience for the top frame, and some 4" square for the legs. You are money ahead, and have a much stouter table. I can buy large rems of 1/2" for .40 cents per pound, 1/2" is 20 pounds per square foot, so a 2x4 of 1/2" is roughly $64. So your build cost is much lower. A mag drill might cost $40 a day to rent, plus the steel for the legs, add on another $40, and you are into your table for $144. Personally, 40"x60" is about the smallest table that I would find useful. Also, I would skip all the holes. Tack things to the table, or build clamps with a foot that you tack to the table. I have been doing that for over 10 years on mine and it has not made the surface wavy or unusable. Is it ideal? No, but at $64 for your size top, just replace it every 10 years or so if it gets bad.
Reply:GarlicCity,Those tab and slot tables look well designed. I didn't know it was a kit that you had to weld up. Pretty cool.
Reply:Originally Posted by walkerA 2x3 piece of 3/16 for $300 is pretty pricey! I just bought a 5x10 and a 4x5 sheet for $250ish for a job. Why don't you go to your local steel supplier and buy a nice piece of 1/2" in the size you want? Fixture table are way overrated in my opinion. Buy your own plate, don't strip the carbon off the top (the black mill scale is very hard and is like a wear surface, it also resists welding BBs). If you think you need holes, buy/rent/borrow a mag drill and drill some holes. Build yourself a nice stout frame, angle iron is best in my experience for the top frame, and some 4" square for the legs. You are money ahead, and have a much stouter table. I can buy large rems of 1/2" for .40 cents per pound, 1/2" is 20 pounds per square foot, so a 2x4 of 1/2" is roughly $64. So your build cost is much lower. A mag drill might cost $40 a day to rent, plus the steel for the legs, add on another $40, and you are into your table for $144. Personally, 40"x60" is about the smallest table that I would find useful. Also, I would skip all the holes. Tack things to the table, or build clamps with a foot that you tack to the table. I have been doing that for over 10 years on mine and it has not made the surface wavy or unusable. Is it ideal? No, but at $64 for your size top, just replace it every 10 years or so if it gets bad.
Reply:Originally Posted by golfingweldorGarlicCity,Those tab and slot tables look well designed. ... Pretty cool.
Reply:Originally Posted by walkerA 2x3 piece of 3/16 for $300 is pretty pricey! I just bought a 5x10 and a 4x5 sheet for $250ish for a job. Why don't you go to your local steel supplier and buy a nice piece of 1/2" in the size you want? Fixture table are way overrated in my opinion. Buy your own plate, don't strip the carbon off the top (the black mill scale is very hard and is like a wear surface, it also resists welding BBs). If you think you need holes, buy/rent/borrow a mag drill and drill some holes. Build yourself a nice stout frame, angle iron is best in my experience for the top frame, and some 4" square for the legs. You are money ahead, and have a much stouter table. I can buy large rems of 1/2" for .40 cents per pound, 1/2" is 20 pounds per square foot, so a 2x4 of 1/2" is roughly $64. So your build cost is much lower. A mag drill might cost $40 a day to rent, plus the steel for the legs, add on another $40, and you are into your table for $144. Personally, 40"x60" is about the smallest table that I would find useful. Also, I would skip all the holes. Tack things to the table, or build clamps with a foot that you tack to the table. I have been doing that for over 10 years on mine and it has not made the surface wavy or unusable. Is it ideal? No, but at $64 for your size top, just replace it every 10 years or so if it gets bad.
Reply:Originally Posted by docwelderi thought that certiflat was on the expensive side also. as much as i'd love a fixture table (bluco/acorn) i'd be afraid of messing it up. i weld to my 5/8" bench top all the time and it's got grinding divots here and there. so far it's held up for 29 years. when it hits the 30 year mark i'll flip it and i'll be set for another 30.
Reply:Thanks for the responses guys. I've been on travel for work so I haven't had any time to put into this. .. I should be home in a couple of weeks so I hope to figure something out soon. I've been checking out CL, but nothing really has come up.If I had my way, I'd build a table from scratch, but time is a factor for me, I just want to have something to use, not another project right now. Originally Posted by walkerA 2x3 piece of 3/16 for $300 is pretty pricey! I just bought a 5x10 and a 4x5 sheet for $250ish for a job. Why don't you go to your local steel supplier and buy a nice piece of 1/2" in the size you want? Fixture table are way overrated in my opinion. Buy your own plate, don't strip the carbon off the top (the black mill scale is very hard and is like a wear surface, it also resists welding BBs). If you think you need holes, buy/rent/borrow a mag drill and drill some holes. Build yourself a nice stout frame, angle iron is best in my experience for the top frame, and some 4" square for the legs. You are money ahead, and have a much stouter table. I can buy large rems of 1/2" for .40 cents per pound, 1/2" is 20 pounds per square foot, so a 2x4 of 1/2" is roughly $64. So your build cost is much lower. A mag drill might cost $40 a day to rent, plus the steel for the legs, add on another $40, and you are into your table for $144. Personally, 40"x60" is about the smallest table that I would find useful. Also, I would skip all the holes. Tack things to the table, or build clamps with a foot that you tack to the table. I have been doing that for over 10 years on mine and it has not made the surface wavy or unusable. Is it ideal? No, but at $64 for your size top, just replace it every 10 years or so if it gets bad.
Reply:Originally Posted by GarlicCityI saw those too. It looks pretty nice to me. Their feedback on that item is good also. I bought their 2' X 3' table with the "free" casters. I will post my experience on here when I get it.
Reply:Originally Posted by Beemer533Great, I'm looking forward to hearing about what you think about it!Also, I had forgotten about it, but when I went and picked up an argon tank at Airgas they had a Miller arc station there; any feedback on those? I'm not finding a ton of reviews. .. I don't necessarily need a folding table, but it would probably work fine for me for the near future. .
Reply:Keep us updated I was curious too when I saw them on ebay, you can apparently call them and ask for a different top thickness.Miller Maxstar 200 SDPiperliner #10 Gold
Reply:Originally Posted by GarlicCityI received the kit on Friday. Just beginning to put it together in between other priorities. I am going to be TIG welding it together as my MIG is in mothballs right now. I cleaned up all the joints where it will be welded with my sander. The fit is pretty good. I didn't need to hammer anything together and at the same time, it wasn't real sloppy. Keep in mind that I hit the surface of the joints with my sander. Need to grab a couple more clamps, but that's just a good excuse to get a couple more clamps. So far, so good as they say.
Reply:Originally Posted by Beemer533Cool, thanks for the update! Did you get the top kit only, or the whole kit with legs?
Reply:Off topic, but this table is for sale locally. Too big and heavy for my purposes, but damn!-------------------------------------------------------------------------------HTP Invertig 131 DC/HFMiller Gold Star with Hobart wire feed (in storage right now).INE Skyline 33 Plasma CutterHammerChiselsome screwdrivers, etc.
Reply:Originally Posted by GarlicCityOff topic, but this table is for sale locally. Too big and heavy for my purposes, but damn!
Reply:Originally Posted by GarlicCityI got the kit with the legs and "free" casters. The kit with just the table and legs is $189.00. The kit with the table, legs, and "free" casters is $269.00. I'm not complaining, but "free", really?Table kit is assembled now. I am going to paint it, but I am going to add onto it so I will wait. Overall, I'm satisfied with it. It went together well and if I had my MIG welder at the shop, it would have gone much easier/faster. It also helps to already have a welding table to work from. Chicken/egg thing. The thing I worried most about is the table rocking. It doesn't. I pretty much just followed the video instructions except for I cleaned the mill scale off best I could for TIG welding. BTW, this is the first thing I built/assembled using TIG. Had to get into some awkward positions and not having a fingertip control really sucked. It's pretty flat lengthwise. On the short side it's a little convex, but not too bad ~0.015". I would have expected the opposite. I plan on using table spacers so I'm not worried. I had to lean on it a little to get the legs square to the table and one of the legs took a little convincing to go all the way down to the table. I would suggest not screwing on the casters and using a mallet on the end of the leg if one doesn't want to go. I did it the way the instructions suggest and the tabs bent. Not a big problem as I just removed the cross brace and straightened it. The other legs went down easily. The nuts they sent were plated so I removed the plating with muriatic acid at ~25% mix with water. Anyway, I just wanted to report back as I said I would.-------------------------------------------------------------------------------HTP Invertig 131 DC/HFMiller Gold Star with Hobart wire feed (in storage right now).INE Skyline 33 Plasma CutterHammerChiselsome screwdrivers, etc.
Reply:Cool, thanks for the feedback! I was kind wondering about building it without a table to begin with, but it sounds like it came out pretty well. Would it be worth borrowing a MiG to put it together? This post edited by the NSA
Reply:Originally Posted by Beemer533Cool, thanks for the feedback! I was kind wondering about building it without a table to begin with, but it sounds like it came out pretty well. Would it be worth borrowing a MiG to put it together? This post edited by the NSA
Reply:I wish I would of found this deal first. I was looking for the fixture kit and found the Strong Hand Fixturepoint table with the round tube fixture kit for $363.00 here. I'd say that's a good price. Best I found was $450.00. I did find the fixture kit here as well for a great price.http://weldingsupply.com/cgi-bin/spi...1|206 |
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