Nice table Evan, when I first saw your title I misread what it said. I thought it said Wedding table, and I thought what? Glad it's something that you can actually use! lol
Awesome metal Table. Evan. Heavy duty I bet. Thanks for sharing this. . I learned ALOT about Homestead and Farming from you and Rebecca ❤🙋♂️👍🏡🚜🐈🐕🐃🐐🐖😁💯😇❤️😎🗜⚒️🔨📺❤
Nice job on that table, half inch top is probably overkill. I am a retired welder. The first thing that I would do is get rid of that flux core wire and invest in a bottle of Argon. That Miller welder is a fine machine and it will do a wonderful job as a true MIG welder. You will find that shielded gas welding is much easier for the novice welder especially working inside your shop, and you will spend much less time cleaning up the welding beads.
I agree for a DIYer it might be overkill but I was an electrician in a factory. When each trade was selecting what tools and equipment they wanted, the millwrights/welders made their tables from 1 3/4" plate 5'X 9'. I asked one of them why so thick and they said so they could grind the table flat and not really damage it after welding on it for years and years.
Weld in a couple pieces of small angle iron underneath and drop in a piece of 3/4" plywood for a tool shelf. Maybe buy a hitch extender and weld it underneath the table. Reason being that you can buy a vise mount for receiver hitch and have you a simple removable bench vise. Lookin goodvthough,solid foundation.
I built the same table 3 yrs ago, 4x4 1/2" top with 3" sq legs. I also added 2" OD pipe under the table and slide pipe inside for an extension. Very handy addition because your table is never big enough!! Great job Evan!
That is LIT! I just bought a welder and made a welding cart. It is the ugliest thing a guy ever saw and there ain't a square corner on it but it works. Last time I welded was 40 years ago so I needed the practice! Great video!!!
Nice build! Your knees and back will thank you in the long run! No fun crawling around on the concrete building a project. You won't regret the bigger casters as they will roll easier over any seams in your concrete.
Good morning Evan and Rebecca, that’s awesome and will last!! You’ll have a great time making the accessory racks and a shelf for your extras. Thanks for sharing with us, stay safe and keep up the great work and videos, and have a little fun along the way Fred. 🙏🏻🙏🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻✋🏻✋🏻
Couple of things: A few years ago I did the exact same thing you're doing for a welding table in my barn, except it's 3 x 5. It has worked great to fab up a mount for the Evolution off the right rear corner of the table so you can mount the saw flush with the top and use the table top to support sticks you are cutting. I also made 2 shelves under the table to hold clamps, cutoffs, squares, etc... but the upper one has a 1-1/2 x 1-1/2 angle iron lip around it so you can quickly hang your angle grinders on it. Also weld on a couple of hooks to hang vise-grip type clamps on it. On the corner near the saw, build a holder to hold a 6" speed square, a carbide scribe, a spring center punch, your little brushes, your angle grinder wrenches and your mig pliers/cutters. On the bottom shelf I mounted the welder and my plasma cutter. Last, but not least, get a bench-top belt sander.....the HF one is very popular and will do the job, but you will need it to de-burr and angle the edges you are going to weld to prep them properly. BTW, those casters are definitely NOT overkill. You will be glad you didn't find smaller ones. As far as auctions/marketplace....keep your eyes open for a good used mag drill and get a set of annular cutters for it. If you're going to build/repair/modify attachments, other farm tools, etc... you will not regret it....especially if you have to drill attachment pin holes.
Recommend adding a non-conductive material on top of your tractor forks to insulate your tractors electrical system from the high frequency of your welder.
Hi Evan. You did a great job on the table, Very heavy duty and it should last a long time. Very well made. I enjoy watching all your videos and looking forward to a lot more to watch. Stay safe and enjoy what you are doing next.
I suggest wiping the table top down with something to keep the rust off. I just used Wd40 on mine. Nice table I wish I would have used a thicker top on mine.
Great build on that table. Maybe you could even make a wood top to put over it to make a butchering table when you start to butcher your own pigs or steers. Thanks for sharing, have a Blessed day.
I had built a small table and welded two vices to it. The only thing I found is it needed to be a heavy vice. Would be nice if it could articulate in many positions. Due to material handling. I was doing a lot of salvage work at the time and found I was hard on the vice. Due to the pounding and things. It has worked well. It would be nice for welding if it could articulate more. Also to grip pipe. The larger it is it won t get beat apart like I have done. I look forward to your additions to your table. Hope you have a great week!
Those little gussets at the top of your table legs were a good idea. Keeps dirt and insects out. I know your shop is pretty tight but I know of some wasps and mud dobbers that would love to live in that little secluded spot.
Awesome job on that table ...great looking and stout...you need a chain hoist for inside your pole barn for lifting heavy things ..look on Andrew Camata link...he built him a nice one...I probalyspelled it wrong but you can find it..
You could put a shelf under the table to sit the welder and welding tools like hammers magnets clamps ect ect so where ever the table is so will be the welding equipment.
When I built mine, I used 3" angle iron for the legs and frame, and the top is 4 x 4 x 1/4. There's 2 pieces of 3" angle under the middle of the table and I have no issues with the 1/4" plate. I recommend not welding the castors to the plates as the castors are the only part of that table you will ever replace. Drill holes and bolt them on. That will also make it far easier to weld the plates to the bottom of the feet. I also added a shelf underneath about 12" off the floor. My angle iron frame has the web even with the edge all around so the outer 3" of table is effectively 1/2" thick for clamping. My castors are much smaller diameter and are a hard rubber compound so there's no need to lock them. It rolls easily if you push it, but not easily enough where you would want to lock it. I know you will enjoy using your table...it's far far better than the concrete floor!
To replace them later, I would have had to drill and tap 4 holes for each castor. Or drilled holes and welded nuts to the inside. But the 3.5" tube legs was just wrong, I don't think nuts would have fit inside the tube. The hole pattern was almost exactly the same size as the tube. So tapping holes seemed like the only option that would work. But I didn't want to take the time and do that. So I went with the easiest way to mount themand weld them.. I agree the castor will be the only thing that will break. But I think a cut off wheel could get them back off fairly quickly. Let hope it isn't anything soon.
@@CountryViewAcres They should last a long while...it's the ball bearings at the top you need to make sure they don't get rusty...keep them lubed. The wheels you can change easily. I love having the castors! Mine were used ones from where I had replaced all the castors on some restaurant fryers...were gunked up with old cooking grease. Low profile (2" wheels) and heavy duty. Most of the time the bench is against the wall but I can roll it out for more room. I mounted a vise on one corner, but NOT a bench grinder! They vibrate everything off the bench. Take a pipe and make a pedestal and set it in a 5 gallon bucket of concrete. Plastic protects your concrete floor and the weight is plenty to hold the grinder.
Well thought out and well built Kevin. I'm sure that table is as good - or better than - most you could buy and a lot cheaper. I was a little concerned about you getting those casters set well and put on until Rebecca showed up and save the day :). But a nice well-built project that I'm sure you'll get tons of use out of. Thanks for sharing.
I probably would have bought one, if I only planned on welding on it. But needed something I won't be afraid to pound on if needed. It wasn't cheap to build, but it should last.
Spray a thin coat of wd40 on the top to keep the light rust off. I got a table alot like that and have to keep it a little oily even indoor. Nice barn. 😀
Great table. You'll use it. I was fortunate to find a 30" x72" table from a guy for $50 a few years back. 1" top, 3" pipe legs. Still need to add casters and bottom shelf. They're very handy. Enjoy welding.
Evan, that table is solid as a rock and that will support just about anything you put on it. The table was well built and you are a good welder, even if you think you are not. The inside of the new barn is looking really good.
Good call on using 1/2" material for the top. Inevitably, you will be pounding on something on that table, and 1/2" plate will hold up way better and stay way flatter than 1/4" would.
Nice table. My welding skills are very limited, especially with a MIG. I seem to do better with a stick because that's what I learned first. I do know that welding horizontally is easier than welding vertically. I would love to eventually expand my metal working tools as well.
Good video you were talking about sliding some tubing in that area below the table top how about getting a vice and attaching to a tube and slide it in to use when needed ?
Nice welding table, Evan. You could put Caplugs in the open ends of the box tubes. A magnetic torch holder for your welder is always a nice thing. You might be able to make one of your own. I recommend making over buying, that way you can have it the way you like, and improvise as you go along.
Don't ask me how (maybe a large bolt), but one adjustable leg would allow it never rock/teeter. The shear weight of the table may flex it enough to always have 4 wheels on the ground.
I've started using recycled fire hose on sharp edges for the straps.
Nice table !
Very nice. thank you for sharing this video. Have a great rest of your week.
Hi.... Evan and Rebecca nice to see you, thank you for showing your video homestead 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋 bye 👋 👕🐔🐓🐥🐕🐩🐈🐖🐄🐐🌱🏡🎥👍👍👍
Nice table Evan, when I first saw your title I misread what it said. I thought it said Wedding table, and I thought what? Glad it's something that you can actually use! lol
from the Netherlands thanks for the video
That's a welding table you can be proud of. That's nice.
Awesome build! I've been kicking around some ideas for something like that too.
Daniel..glad to see you enjoy Evan's channel, too..good man👍🚜🚜
Nice work table , well worth the extra thickness. Now get a gas mix for the wire welder .
That is a very handsome barn you got there , the colors are awesome together !
Awesome metal Table. Evan. Heavy duty I bet. Thanks for sharing this. . I learned ALOT about Homestead and Farming from you and Rebecca ❤🙋♂️👍🏡🚜🐈🐕🐃🐐🐖😁💯😇❤️😎🗜⚒️🔨📺❤
Good job Evan!
Nice workmanship. Evan....
Nice build. Maybe YOU should add a shelf under the top to put your welder and things like a hand held grinder etc.
Nice job on that table, half inch top is probably overkill. I am a retired welder. The first thing that I would do is get rid of that flux core wire and invest in a bottle of Argon. That Miller welder is a fine machine and it will do a wonderful job as a true MIG welder. You will find that shielded gas welding is much easier for the novice welder especially working inside your shop, and you will spend much less time cleaning up the welding beads.
When I build a welding cart, it will hold a gas bottle. I plan to get a bottle of shielding gas after it is made.
Thanks, I'm sure you will enjoy MIG welding.
Another retired welder here. Great advice!
I agree for a DIYer it might be overkill but I was an electrician in a factory. When each trade was selecting what tools and equipment they wanted, the millwrights/welders made their tables from 1 3/4" plate 5'X 9'. I asked one of them why so thick and they said so they could grind the table flat and not really damage it after welding on it for years and years.
Harold Reece, that is one and three quarters inches. Not 1 piece 3/4" thick.
That’s one heck of a table that will last a lifetime. Nice job 👍
Great job Evan and Rebecca!
Only use flux core wire outside. Get some gas and solid core for indoor welding. Your welds would be much better. Nice table man! Good job!👍😎
Good job on welding table
Great job very simple concept but functional will last you a very long time. Have one I made for welding in 1985 still holding up very well
Weld in a couple pieces of small angle iron underneath and drop in a piece of 3/4" plywood for a tool shelf. Maybe buy a hitch extender and weld it underneath the table. Reason being that you can buy a vise mount for receiver hitch and have you a simple removable bench vise. Lookin goodvthough,solid foundation.
One thing i would add to the table. Is supports for the legs. At least on 3 sides.
Nice Work.....
Awesome. You have put a lot of thought into it. Well done
You have made the perfect Hornet or Yellow Jacket home in the openings in the tubing.
I built the same table 3 yrs ago, 4x4 1/2" top with 3" sq legs. I also added 2" OD pipe under the table and slide pipe inside for an extension. Very handy addition because your table is never big enough!! Great job Evan!
That table is stout!
That is LIT! I just bought a welder and made a welding cart. It is the ugliest thing a guy ever saw and there ain't a square corner on it but it works. Last time I welded was 40 years ago so I needed the practice! Great video!!!
Well done. Beautiful table/bench.
Find and rebuild a large old vise for your table. Great project for a rainy day.
jack
Evan .. .I love it.. 'No, that's not a good towel!"..all the women were thinking good that from experience 👍..good towels being used in the garage.🤪
Nice build! Your knees and back will thank you in the long run! No fun crawling around on the concrete building a project. You won't regret the bigger casters as they will roll easier over any seams in your concrete.
Hi Evan👋🏻 that was clever
Good morning Evan and Rebecca, that’s awesome and will last!! You’ll have a great time making the accessory racks and a shelf for your extras. Thanks for sharing with us, stay safe and keep up the great work and videos, and have a little fun along the way Fred. 🙏🏻🙏🏻👍🏻👍🏻👏🏻👏🏻✋🏻✋🏻
You did a good job. This is going to be an awesome work area. You took the time to make it right, and it shows. Blessings🙂
Couple of things: A few years ago I did the exact same thing you're doing for a welding table in my barn, except it's 3 x 5. It has worked great to fab up a mount for the Evolution off the right rear corner of the table so you can mount the saw flush with the top and use the table top to support sticks you are cutting. I also made 2 shelves under the table to hold clamps, cutoffs, squares, etc... but the upper one has a 1-1/2 x 1-1/2 angle iron lip around it so you can quickly hang your angle grinders on it. Also weld on a couple of hooks to hang vise-grip type clamps on it. On the corner near the saw, build a holder to hold a 6" speed square, a carbide scribe, a spring center punch, your little brushes, your angle grinder wrenches and your mig pliers/cutters. On the bottom shelf I mounted the welder and my plasma cutter. Last, but not least, get a bench-top belt sander.....the HF one is very popular and will do the job, but you will need it to de-burr and angle the edges you are going to weld to prep them properly. BTW, those casters are definitely NOT overkill. You will be glad you didn't find smaller ones. As far as auctions/marketplace....keep your eyes open for a good used mag drill and get a set of annular cutters for it. If you're going to build/repair/modify attachments, other farm tools, etc... you will not regret it....especially if you have to drill attachment pin holes.
Hey Python, Meat Loaf,
"You took the words right out my mouth"
Perfect eye deers
I was thinking of making a mount for the metal saw on one side and a table extension on the other side to hold long pieces. 👍
Functional project. 👍🦅🇺🇸
Nice work on your table, you'll probably use it more than you think.🧡👍👍
Recommend adding a non-conductive material on top of your tractor forks to insulate your tractors electrical system from the high frequency of your welder.
Great video. Keepem coming Evan
Fine job on your welding table.
Nice job, well made and should do everything you need.
Great looking table!
Your table looks good Evan good job. God bless you and as always Amen
Thats a nice welding table👍
Excellent job, Evan👍👍
Hi Evan. You did a great job on the table, Very heavy duty and it should last a long time. Very well made. I enjoy watching all your videos and looking forward to a lot more to watch. Stay safe and enjoy what you are doing next.
I suggest wiping the table top down with something to keep the rust off. I just used Wd40 on mine. Nice table I wish I would have used a thicker top on mine.
Outstanding!
Very nice work bench! That will be so handy to have around the shop!! Love watching!
Good job on your new work table👍😇
That looks great! So clever to have the options to expand and build onto the table at a later date. Well done!
looks sweet evan, now build me 2 more!!! i want !!
Great build on that table. Maybe you could even make a wood top to put over it to make a butchering table when you start to butcher your own pigs or steers. Thanks for sharing, have a Blessed day.
I bought a table with white cutting boards that are the table top. Made for butchering. But it will need repairs. I plan to fix it up eventually.
@@CountryViewAcres Oh that's great.
Good job Evan. That is a very nice table. Should last you many years. Well thought out.
I had built a small table and welded two vices to it. The only thing I found is it needed to be a heavy vice. Would be nice if it could articulate in many positions. Due to material handling. I was doing a lot of salvage work at the time and found I was hard on the vice. Due to the pounding and things. It has worked well. It would be nice for welding if it could articulate more. Also to grip pipe. The larger it is it won t get beat apart like I have done. I look forward to your additions to your table. Hope you have a great week!
Those little gussets at the top of your table legs were a good idea. Keeps dirt and insects out. I know your shop is pretty tight but I know of some wasps and mud dobbers that would love to live in that little secluded spot.
Great project good build. I’m sure we’ll be seeing this table put to good use in future projects. Stay safe
That came out sweet! Nice job!
Nice table. It will last you your lifetime.
Good work!
You need to wear safety glasses when grinding.👀🙀
Good job!
Awesome job on that table ...great looking and stout...you need a chain hoist for inside your pole barn for lifting heavy things ..look on Andrew Camata link...he built him a nice one...I probalyspelled it wrong but you can find it..
Looks great
Great job
Now weld a piece of scrap metal to the underside of the top for a place to connect your ground clamp.
You could put a shelf under the table to sit the welder and welding tools like hammers magnets clamps ect ect so where ever the table is so will be the welding equipment.
Nice work. Good video
When I built mine, I used 3" angle iron for the legs and frame, and the top is 4 x 4 x 1/4. There's 2 pieces of 3" angle under the middle of the table and I have no issues with the 1/4" plate. I recommend not welding the castors to the plates as the castors are the only part of that table you will ever replace. Drill holes and bolt them on. That will also make it far easier to weld the plates to the bottom of the feet. I also added a shelf underneath about 12" off the floor. My angle iron frame has the web even with the edge all around so the outer 3" of table is effectively 1/2" thick for clamping. My castors are much smaller diameter and are a hard rubber compound so there's no need to lock them. It rolls easily if you push it, but not easily enough where you would want to lock it. I know you will enjoy using your table...it's far far better than the concrete floor!
To replace them later, I would have had to drill and tap 4 holes for each castor. Or drilled holes and welded nuts to the inside. But the 3.5" tube legs was just wrong, I don't think nuts would have fit inside the tube. The hole pattern was almost exactly the same size as the tube.
So tapping holes seemed like the only option that would work. But I didn't want to take the time and do that. So I went with the easiest way to mount themand weld them..
I agree the castor will be the only thing that will break. But I think a cut off wheel could get them back off fairly quickly. Let hope it isn't anything soon.
@@CountryViewAcres They should last a long while...it's the ball bearings at the top you need to make sure they don't get rusty...keep them lubed. The wheels you can change easily. I love having the castors! Mine were used ones from where I had replaced all the castors on some restaurant fryers...were gunked up with old cooking grease. Low profile (2" wheels) and heavy duty. Most of the time the bench is against the wall but I can roll it out for more room. I mounted a vise on one corner, but NOT a bench grinder! They vibrate everything off the bench. Take a pipe and make a pedestal and set it in a 5 gallon bucket of concrete. Plastic protects your concrete floor and the weight is plenty to hold the grinder.
I think I’d have to add a shelf under the table. A place to store your clamps small accessories, tools but overall a very nice job as usual.
Looks great Evan I’d smooth off the edges just to save you catching yourself on the edges
Looks like a heavy duty welding table to me. Great job, Evan!👍
good job!!!
Well thought out and well built Kevin. I'm sure that table is as good - or better than - most you could buy and a lot cheaper. I was a little concerned about you getting those casters set well and put on until Rebecca showed up and save the day :). But a nice well-built project that I'm sure you'll get tons of use out of. Thanks for sharing.
His name is Evan
@@cathiwim Yeah well sorry. Sometimes my hand is quicker than the noodle ... quiet often in fact. But maybe EVAN will forgive thee:).
Not so much into welding, but damn I love that pole barn!! As well as all your videos👍
Those Evolution saws are great! Nice job on the table!
Maybe add a big vice that can be hinged and swing out of the way when not needed.
Ive been wanting to build a welding table, but haven't seen any that I can afford. Good job, my friend!!!
I probably would have bought one, if I only planned on welding on it. But needed something I won't be afraid to pound on if needed. It wasn't cheap to build, but it should last.
Spray a thin coat of wd40 on the top to keep the light rust off. I got a table alot like that and have to keep it a little oily
even indoor. Nice barn. 😀
So glad you’re rested up and back at it. Very nice job as always.
EVAN,
Best practices is to line the top of your new welding bench
with brick. NOW you need to build yourself a chop saw
table/bench/stand.
!
That thing is going to last forever
Great table. You'll use it. I was fortunate to find a 30" x72" table from a guy for $50 a few years back. 1" top, 3" pipe legs. Still need to add casters and bottom shelf. They're very handy. Enjoy welding.
Love it
I love watching people make things from scratch, so this video was right up my alley! Nice job on the table, Evan!
Evan, that table is solid as a rock and that will support just about anything you put on it. The table was well built and you are a good welder, even if you think you are not. The inside of the new barn is looking really good.
Good call on using 1/2" material for the top. Inevitably, you will be pounding on something on that table, and 1/2" plate will hold up way better and stay way flatter than 1/4" would.
Grand idea!
Better than always pushing that heavy thing around...😊👍🏻
Good video
Grinding and paint makes me the welder I ain't.😉
Nice table. My welding skills are very limited, especially with a MIG. I seem to do better with a stick because that's what I learned first. I do know that welding horizontally is easier than welding vertically. I would love to eventually expand my metal working tools as well.
Great job, safer for you than on your knees.
Good video you were talking about sliding some tubing in that area below the table top how about getting a vice and attaching to a tube and slide it in to use when needed ?
I built mine about the same. Only my top is removeable and there is a egg crate pattern underneath for clamping and using welding jigs
Nice welding table, Evan. You could put Caplugs in the open ends of the box tubes. A magnetic torch holder for your welder is always a nice thing. You might be able to make one of your own.
I recommend making over buying, that way you can have it the way you like, and improvise as you go along.
Don't ask me how (maybe a large bolt), but one adjustable leg would allow it never rock/teeter. The shear weight of the table may flex it enough to always have 4 wheels on the ground.
Good bench Mr. That steel is expensive. Well done
Great job. The table looks great and so functional.🎃
that will get 'er done, good job, keep safe..