1
submitted 1 year ago by MapleEngineer@lemmy.ca to c/welding@lemmy.ca

In early 2020 at the beginning of the pandemic my team was laid off by a company that had made some bad decisions, found itself overextended, and panicked. Needing to find something to occupy ourselves my hand and I decided to built the pot rack that I had been promising my wife for 20 years.

Here is how we did it.

This is my hand. She first visited us two years before to make maple syrup and stayed for a month. She visited three or four times then came to stay in the spring of 2020, again to make maple syrup, and ended up stuck at our homestead during the initial covid panic and travel restrictions. She was an aircraft maintenance quality manager who had never welded before. This is the project where I taught her and she cut her teeth.

The pot rack is a simple rectangle with two cross bars. It is constructed of 2" x 1//4" cold rolled flat bar. We started with the outside rectangle sitting on the floor of my shipping container workshop.

image

Next, we added the cross bars. The cross bars will prevent the side bars from flexing under the weight of the pots and provide additional hook space for pots.

image

Then we added little flats at the corners for the lifting eyes to which the chains would attach.

image

After some grinding (a lot of grinding) and a trip to the hardware store for some chain and carabiners we carried it into the house and hung it up in the kitchen to see how it looked.

image

It seemed to be in the right place and worked well with the Ikea adjustable hanging lights.

The next thing we needed to figure out was what we were going to use as hooks. I looked at a bunch of pictures of pot racks and searched for hooks that would work with ours but didn't find what I was looking for. We decided to make our own hooks.

I modeled the tool and jig on one that we use to bend loops in the 9 gauge high tension galvanized fence wire that we use to support the mainline of our maple syrup connection system.

image

The hole goes over the big pin and drags the wire around forming it into the loop.

This is what we came up with.

image

The 1/4" rod we're cold forming into the hooks is inserted as shown. The threaded rod clamp holds it in place while the initial curve is formed on the end.

image

image

We then slide the rod down, reclamp it, and bend the second bend, closing the loop.

image

Finally, we move the tool down to the end post and bend the hook. They look like this when the bending is done.

image

We used two bottles of gun bluing to turn everything black, rubbed everything with a mix of mineral oil and bees wax, hung it back up in the kitchen, and installed the hooks and bent them closed.

image

image

My wife was quick to add pots. Now the only problem is that I bang my head on the pots when I'm using the butcher block the pot rack hangs over. I've figured out which pots I can hang on the side that I work on and that if I hang them so that they hang away from me I can work under it with very little pot/head interaction.

image

Up next...replacing the round maple legs under the 850 lb maple butcher block with a matching welded steel frame.

no comments (yet)
sorted by: hot top controversial new old
there doesn't seem to be anything here
this post was submitted on 23 Jun 2023
1 points (100.0% liked)

Welding

69 readers
2 users here now

A community for all welders and all processes including brazing. If you've never welded before but want to get started, ask questions. If you're an experienced hobbyist, show off your projects. If you're a professional show off your projects, answer questions, and encourage beginners and hobbyists alike.

RULES:

  1. All Lemmy.ca rules apply here.

  2. Everyone (see rule 98) is welcome.

  3. There is no best process, only the best process for the welder and application in question. Help each other, don't criticize or judge.

  4. If you’ve seen a question 100 times answer it the 101st time or ignore it. Even better, write a complete, detailed answer and suggest that the mod(s) pin it to the community.

[Did you actually think there were 98 rules?]

  1. If you present something as fact and are asked to provide proof or a source provide proof or a source. Proof must be from a reliable source. If you fail to provide proof or a source your post or comment may be removed.

  2. Don’t be a dick. Yes, this is a catch-all rule.

  3. The mod(s) have the final say.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS