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|    rec.crafts.metalworking    |    Metal working and metallurgy    |    215,319 messages    |
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|    Message 213,967 of 215,319    |
|    Jim Wilkins to All    |
|    Re: Shop Crane Revisited    |
|    22 Dec 24 14:30:50    |
      From: muratlanne@gmail.com              "Bob La Londe" wrote in message news:vk9ghm$mv2t$1@dont-email.me...              For a jib crane I am thinking something a little more substantial.       although bolting part of an engine hoist or truck bed crane on to the       roof of my office did occur to me. I'd like something for triple duty.       I don;t often swing heavy parts onto the lathe or mill in the back, but       I do from time to time. Heavier than the hundred pound vise I take off       and put on the mill table. I'd like to have a jig with a trolley so I       can set things on the mill table, into the chuck jaws, and lift things       up to the roof of my office. ...              I'm thinking if I could find a twenty foot piece of 6inch well casing or       similar I could build both ends onto roller bearings and easily swing       1000-1500 pounds on a relatively short jib of 6-8 feet and meet all       three purposes. I'd probably get the Harbor Freight trolley and the       1300 pound electric winch they sell.              A jib crane is really secondary. Primary is a gantry crane to meet most       of my needs without buying a forklift. Yes I have bucket forks, but       they will only lift about 1500 (and it complains about it) pounds, the       tractor doesn't have room in the shop, and it doesn't reach high enough.              --       Bob La Londe       -----------------------------------------------       https://alaskahomesteadadventures.com/blog/2017/10/24/cabin-5-gin-pole              The guy lines on my TV antenna attach to a loose fitting ring suspended by       cords attached further up, which allows the mast to rotate without bearings.              The bottom ends of my 2" pipe shear legs are 1/2+ balls turned from both       ends of a dumbbell, with a step on the handle end that supports the pipe.       The socket is layers of plywood reinforced with welded angle iron. They have       lifted and shifted ~3000 Lbs without noticeable damage. Like the tripods the       column loading is all straight down the center, no cantilevered bending as       with a jib crane.              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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