Date: Sun, 20 May 2018 14:38:28 -0400
Reply-To: Stephen Grisanti <bike2vcu@YAHOO.COM>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Stephen Grisanti <bike2vcu@YAHOO.COM>
Subject: Re: Material Source for Custom Table Leg
In-Reply-To: <C4A05FB9-43FF-4705-B464-7593BEFB410E@shaw.ca>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8
I've gotten too big a diameter items turned down at a local machine for reasonable prices. Usually aluminum but steel should be doable.
Stephen
Mobile
> On May 20, 2018, at 12:17 PM, Alistair Bell <albell@SHAW.CA> wrote:
>
> Hey Steve,
>
> That sounds like a great project. One thing though, I’m sure I measured the stock leg tubing as 35mm. Yeah, 0.003” difference than the 1.375 stuff you mention doesn’t sound like a deal breaker...
>
> But I’m almost 100 percent sure I’ve tried all the pipe and tubing I’ve had access to and none were a satisfying fit. I’ll see if I can double check that in the next day or so.
>
> Metric sized tubing ain’t as easily available up here in the supposedly fully metric Canada. It’s frustrating to have to pay a premium for it.
>
> Alistair
>
>
>
>> On May 20, 2018, at 9:02 AM, Steve Williams <sbw@SBW.ORG> wrote:
>>
>> Can any of you tell me where to buy steel tube material to make a custom
>> rear table leg? I measured it at 1.375 inch OD and 0.1 inch wall thickness.
>>
>> My '84 Wolfsburg: https://sbw.org/sbwsty/
>>
>> My idea is to extend the vertical tube about 12 inches taller and weld
>> the horizontal tube in the original position, forming a T.
>>
>> I'm in Los Angeles, where you'd think you can get anything. But I've
>> visited a local distributor, and they only have expensive DOM stock in
>> that size:
>>
>> https://www.mkmetal.net/
>>
>> They recommended a bigger distributor who list it in CDSR in their
>> catalog, but who don't actually have it available:
>>
>> https://www.tubeservice.com/
>>
>> A local welder says he can do the job, but he doesn't have the stock.
>>
>> Why a custom table leg? Because I want to add a mount for a monitor, so
>> I can work on the computer more easily in the van. It turns out the
>> table leg is the same OD as the tube in the monitor mount I'm looking at.
>>
>> https://urlzr.mp/fmb (Amazon)
>>
>> I've checked the geometry: If the tube extends above the top of the
>> stove, the arm of the mount can reach toward the front of the van,
>> around the back of a 27-inch monitor, and hold the monitor in a
>> comfortable position to work with a keyboard and mouse on the table.
>>
>> In that position, the arm would interfere with opening or closing the
>> kitchen top. And I certainly wouldn't use the aft burner of the stove
>> with the monitor deployed!
>>
>> But it'll be easy to swing the monitor around to stow flat against the
>> side window forward of the closet door. I plan to rig tie downs to hold
>> the monitor securely against the window while driving. And probably
>> some sort of cover with a pad to protect the face of the monitor when
>> stowed.
>>
>> My van has the clunky old-style table mounting plate. I would probably
>> flatten the end of the horizontal tube to fit the newer-style mounting
>> plate:
>>
>> https://urlzr.mp/emb (GoWesty)
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