Ttrees
Iroko loco!
Hello folks
Just pondering this for the future, as I've got a few lengths of suitable heavy gauge box iron which would nicely do the job of making a scissor lift table.
It would be a great outfeed and also double up for plenty of other duties, small ride on lawnmower
is likely the heaviest think would need.
Not looked into all designs, but three that stand out
Mainly looking into these designs
The Harbor freight one looks about the size I want, and drops down nice and low,
be low enough to lift something heavy and awkward onto.
( bit long for inbetween saws )
450 × 450
Not looked much into this Felder one below,
It doesn't seem like it drops as low as the Harbor Frieght, too big for what I want,
but that doesn't mean it can't be made smaller.
And then Marius's Hornberger's design which is worth a mention.
Perfect size for me, bit shorter than the rest, no need for it to lift so high though.
The problem is the screw looks too slow for my needs, and needs an expensive thread,
compared to a likely expensive hydraulic ram, which I have no clue about at all, apart from using a car jack a few times.
Would love to see if I could acquire one for cheap, should they be available from something else,
I don't need it for to be reliable under strain if that helps to get one cheaper, as the foot pump looks the best method.
What I have at hand is a car jack like below.
I was thinking I could make do with a two or even three stage lift for use the jack, at least for a while to see if I could get by with that.
So apart from my ram question, I have some more...
Before I even think about getting some scrap pine to mock up,
Do you think it's necessary to have a dual or stacked scissor lift like Marius's design,
or could it be accomplished with a single pair of (legs?)
I know I can just mock it up, but just asking should anyone have seen something else like what I'm looking for.
Love to see some more examples, these must exist.
Strange not to see more of these harbor freight ones about, as they look dandy, (bar the handle which could be seemingly much improved, should it not fold down.)
Thanks for reading
Tom
Just pondering this for the future, as I've got a few lengths of suitable heavy gauge box iron which would nicely do the job of making a scissor lift table.
It would be a great outfeed and also double up for plenty of other duties, small ride on lawnmower
is likely the heaviest think would need.
Not looked into all designs, but three that stand out
Mainly looking into these designs
The Harbor freight one looks about the size I want, and drops down nice and low,
be low enough to lift something heavy and awkward onto.
( bit long for inbetween saws )
450 × 450
Not looked much into this Felder one below,
It doesn't seem like it drops as low as the Harbor Frieght, too big for what I want,
but that doesn't mean it can't be made smaller.
And then Marius's Hornberger's design which is worth a mention.
Perfect size for me, bit shorter than the rest, no need for it to lift so high though.
The problem is the screw looks too slow for my needs, and needs an expensive thread,
compared to a likely expensive hydraulic ram, which I have no clue about at all, apart from using a car jack a few times.
Would love to see if I could acquire one for cheap, should they be available from something else,
I don't need it for to be reliable under strain if that helps to get one cheaper, as the foot pump looks the best method.
What I have at hand is a car jack like below.
I was thinking I could make do with a two or even three stage lift for use the jack, at least for a while to see if I could get by with that.
So apart from my ram question, I have some more...
Before I even think about getting some scrap pine to mock up,
Do you think it's necessary to have a dual or stacked scissor lift like Marius's design,
or could it be accomplished with a single pair of (legs?)
I know I can just mock it up, but just asking should anyone have seen something else like what I'm looking for.
Love to see some more examples, these must exist.
Strange not to see more of these harbor freight ones about, as they look dandy, (bar the handle which could be seemingly much improved, should it not fold down.)
Thanks for reading
Tom