2018 - Volume #42, Issue #1, Page #34
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Old Hand Truck Makes Handy Welder Cart
“I had two welders, and I got tired of carrying them around,” says the retired small engine mechanic who likes to help out his Fairmont, N.C., neighbors by fixing broken lawn mowers and other things.
He replaced the cart’s old tires with solid rubber wheels from an old Murray lawn mower. And he beefed up the deteriorated platform base with angle iron to hold one of the welders.
To accommodate a second welder, he welded an angle iron frame between the handle sides to hold a piece of plywood about halfway up.
“I have it spaced so the load is even,” Cummings says.
Welder cables are held in place by the metal handles of old paint rollers bent in the shape of an L and tacked to the hand truck frame. Welding rods are convenient in an 8-in. piece of 3-in PVC pipe with a cap in the bottom that is mounted to the hand truck with tape.
Though he purchased a new 115/220-amp welder that he uses occasionally, Cummings notes he uses his 40-year-old, 100-amp welder for most projects.
Because everything is handy on his welder cart, Cummings says it’s easier for him to tackle a project whether it’s fixing something or when he has an idea to make something out of scrap.
Contact: FARM SHOW Followup, Harrell Cummings, 455 Reva Rd., Fairmont, N.C. 28340 (ph 910 628-7378; hcsc455@att.net).
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