I have designed this bracket to make it quicker and easier to build a
traditional carpenters workhorse. These strong steel trestle brackets
allow the top to be replaced when worn, they save hours in making the
traditional carpentry stool and last a lifetime. They are ideal for
professional tradesmen or home DIY use.
Please visit my website at www.basteelbrackets.co.uk for more
information.
"B. A. Steel Brackets" wrote...
> I have designed this bracket to make it quicker and easier to build a
> traditional carpenters workhorse.
Well, I don't think they're gonna sell to well over here on the sunny side
of the pond.
Firstly, we want sawhorse brackets that fit 2x4s (pronounced two-byes in
Murican), which measure 1 1/2" x 3 1/2", of course.
Also, with your design, weight on the top of the horse will stress the
welds. The brackets we have available here at every hardware store are
designed so weight on the top of the horse pinches the bracket tighter on
the 2x4 spine of the horse.
In addition, we also have nifty folding metal and flat folding plastic
horses.
Best I've seen on a job though, a fella made a horse/stool/toolbox
combination that seemed pretty darned handy. Seems to me, a fella walks
onto a jobsite with a box like that, and he looks like he knows what the
possum fur he's doing; other hand, you walk in and start ripping two bys in
half to put together some kind of wobley English sawhorse, well, be good for
a laugh any way, ennit?
--
Timothy Juvenal
www.rude-tone.com/work.htm
That's fine if it works for you but, it will never sell in the US. American
construction crews generally make sawhorses on site and scrap them when they
are done. The stamped steel brackets available here take standard size wood
and are cheap enough to through away when the job is done. Might sell in the
UK but not here.
"B. A. Steel Brackets" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hi Hambone Slim
>
> In practice we have found that 2x2 are fine for the legs and provides
> great stability. Also we have used a thick weld that attaches the leg
> bracket to the main plate. These have been used heavily and are as
> sturdy as the day they were assembled.
>
"B. A. Steel Brackets" wrote...
> In practice we have found that 2x2 are fine for the legs and provides
> great stability.
I'm sure your brackets are made godd & strong, but still, most carpenters
and painters in the US don't have ready access to 2" square lumber - our
standard building lumber (fir, hemlock, or pine 2x4s) is 1 1/2" x 3 1/2".
Even as a woodshop owner with 8/4 and thicker stock in inventory, I'd rather
pick up something that will work with 2x4s rather than have to mill up 2"
square legs. A 2x4x8 footer runs around 3 bucks these days.
Although your brackets look spiffy, I don't really see the advantage over
what's already available on the market.
--
Timothy Juvenal
www.rude-tone.com/work.htm