I appreciate you making this video series and including links for the tools, I just ordered them. With a little patience, I was able to find one of these table saws for a great price.
Bought myself a Primeweld Mig180 based on your videos. Used it to repair my wife's rig that I hit an elk with last month. Now I'm scouting around the Estacada area for a table saw to make myself a welding table. Thanks for the inspiration!
@@amcustomfab for sure! I've never thought "I need a welding table in my small engine repair shop." Until watching this series. Now I TOTALLY need one.
Keep on keepin' on! I pick up my cast craftsman tomorrow morning; paying $60, so not $30, but not bad to get started. Such a useful and accessible series. Thanks
I built a very similar table many years ago. My clamps are made with pipe clamps. Was very easy, just weld a bar (or 5/8" bolt) in the end of the pipe and you are set. I drilled cross holes in the pipe and plug welded so they are smooth on the bottom end, but thats not really necessary. You can still use them as clamps , just slide the fixed end back on. Good vids, keep them coming.
This is a great. I found one of these saws today, very rusty from sitting in a barn but the price was right and will work for building one of these tables. Keep up the terrific series. Really looking forward to seeing your ideas for a belt sander.
This work pretty good. I've been using these this way for a couple years. I have noticed I've gotten a lot of flex. I think I'm going to make a new batch with a set that are a tiny bit beefier. I saw some at Rual king today for $7.00 that felt a lot beefier. The tilt 5 degree advice you gave is a great idea that I didn't do.
Great build, love all the information. Like I had said in the first (or second) video, I went out and found the same table for $40. Great deal and strong table. Can't wait to build it when I get back to my main house in June. Keep up the great informational videos. Thank you.
Thanks for the tip! I've been needing a welding table for a while and after watching your video it dawned on me I have several old table saws laying around, So I tore them down and was able to fab up a pretty bad ass welding table with them! Can't believe I hadn't thought of that before now! Great idea, Thanks again!!
I’m looking for one of these table saws or a welding table in the Austin area. This video series has really got me interested. Thank you for posting this
Another ingenious mod. I would add a hinged grinder cutoff saw with provisions to miter cut right on the table so everything is at reach. The grinder mitter cutoff tool can be swung under the table when not in use. This i will do to my table once I find one for no more than $50.
Love watching the diy videos, when you were drilling the ⅝'s holes could you have done that with the plasma cutter? And even make it like your other welding table?
Nice job on the clamps! I still haven’t found an old table saw near me. I was welding on my cheap fold up HF table today and I’d love to have more space. Gotta keep searching craigslist and FB marketplace. Keep the videos coming.
I made several clamps from those exact HF bar clamps. They work just fine. I'm sure this isn't a new idea, but in case nobody else has chimed in: Another harbor freight item ripe for hacking into clamps is the "Drill Press Locking Clamps" to give you those vise-grip kind of clamps. You just cut off the wing nut thing off the bottom and similarly weld on a 5/8" stub. From experience Ill let you know that you need to 1) cut off the entire flat plate and bolt assembly off the thing (not just the threaded stud) and 2) angle the 5/8 stub at more like 20 or 30 degrees so the back handle end angles up and is lifted off the table so you can operate it (you lose a little height capacity doing this, but still have plenty in my opinion). The pivoting swivel clamp face thing CAN be a nuisance and I haven't yet decided whether or not I want to cut them off. It's not awful and occasionally serves its purpose, but the nuisance is not trivial either. You could try both ways and see what you like better. I also welded some short (about 3/4" long) stubs of 1/4 rod to the FRONT of the knurled thumb screw head making a T-handle to facilitate adjusting the grip even after it's locked in. You locate this in front of the thumb screw because if you weld the T to the back end, you lose the ability to quickly spin the adjuster with the knurled knob. Looking good. Drill more holes!
Great video. I'm sure this is on your list already, but just in case, put some screw-on tabs on the table edges for quick 90 degree alignment. When not in use the tabs can be loosened and rotate down out of the way or removed.
Going to go off track for a moment here since I know you're at your PC . I'm getting ready to buy the PrimeWeld CUT60 and I was wondering about a couple of things . #1 - Can you recommend an upgrade for the torch or has PrimeWeld already made one ? #2 - Have you found a more compatible table than the Langmuir Systems Crossfire PRO you did a review on a couple years ago ? Being disabled I really have to watch the budget and your channel I have found to be very helpful . Thank You and keep up the great work Sir .
Absolutely primeworld has already come out with two aftermarket machine torches I recommend the upm-105 that one is a good torch. And as far as CNC plasma tables go. I can't really speak to any other brands langmuir is the only one I have personally used they're pretty bare Bones and don't have the bells and whistles but that's also what makes them affordable . If I were to do it over again starting off I would not get the pro table because 90% of what I do will fit on their standard table with the EL kit . I would definitely get the IHS z-axis. But I found that the torch height controller personally is not worth the extra $400 half the time I just unplug it cuz it's so finicky but the IHS will still super helpful. Thanks for watching really appreciate the support on the channel. ,😎👊
@@amcustomfab I'm not personally good with PC stuff but I have family and friends who are . Do you have an email or are you just on the social media things ? I don't have any social media but I'd love to share some builds with you . Thanks again and keep up the great work Sir.
@@amcustomfab The reason behind asking about the table . I might have my hands on a Torchmate 4x4 table that includes CNC controllers , Laptop ( HP Elitebook G5 i7-8500) and software but no cutter for a price I can afford . I'm wondering if the PrimeWeld Cut 60 would be able to hook up to all these things I'm just now learning about ? Again any help I'm grateful for . Thank You and Keep up the great work Sir.
holy shit such a good idea! i just inherited basically the same table saw. super old and still works, but i don't need it. was just gonna give it away, but now i'm not :D
Did not read all your comments but I have been wondering why you did not leave motor and other components in place put a metal cutting wheel on in place of a wood cutting blade making a metal cutter. All accessories that come with the saw for wood cutting would work for metal cutting as well. The metal cutting blade can be dropped out of sight when not needed. It would limit your ability to portable but the trade-off might be worth it.
And with the motor and spindle the saw weighs a TON... When I picked mine up last week, we took off the motor and wings, just to be able to lift and put in the back of the truck.. @@amcustomfab
I just watched all three parts Nice job I wish I would have thought about the table saw but I had thought about steel surface plates prior to your series and bought several of them at auction, problem is with them is they are extremely heavy and have underneath structure formed to the plate to keep it flat, so the issue arises of how to drill a grid with the underneath structure, I have a mag drill but man what bit were you using? it went through that like butter. cool series
$30 is rare I had a buddy just pick one up for free last week though. And there are three or four in my area for between $75 and $100 right now it never hurts to make somebody an offer the one that I got for $30 was posted for $75 I waited till it had been up for 3 weeks and then I offered them $30 and they took it
I haven't broken the cast part but I have bent them just by clamping (too much pressure I guess) and I've broken off a couple of handles. The handles are cheap plastic and the screw barely goes into it so all the torque you put on it when tightening is going into the plastic. They snap at the "lug" on the screw that the handle is molded over. I think they should be fine for a budget clamp when you are using it for fixturing. You really don't need a lot of pressure to hold pieces in place while you weld them..