So I took a whole day off of work yesterday. My plan was to scoot the little one off to daycare, hit up the DMV in the morning, register the trailer, stop by the steel yard and pick up the steel to finish the trailer, finish the trailer then spend whatever time I had left stripping the front suspension off of the s10.
It did not go according to plan. 4 hours later, I was finally leaving the DMV. what a nightmare that place is.. its ALWAYS like that too. They rolled out a new computer system to speed things up 6 months ago or so and things have doubled in wait time. By the time I got the steel and home it was damn near 3pm. So.. I got about 2 hours in on the trailer, and not nearly as much done as I would have wished.
I am however, incredibly impressed with this little Hobart. I figured it would work like most of the other 110V welders on heavier stuff and I'd have to go super slow.. never did I think it would blow through 1/8"! So I turned it down a little bit and boy it was like butter.
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Its a shame that flux core is so ugly, but its perfect for outside and the application. I'll probably go through this roll of it, then make the full transition over to GMAW.
I went through a total redesign of what I was originally going to do with the trailer after really laying things out and looking at it. So, I scribbled out a newer, stronger, plan and started to cutting. I'm basically going to run four vertical rails the length of the trailer, with cross bars every 18" where the load is primarily carried and stringers across the middle every 20" to tie everything together. the large center beams are 3x4x3/16" and happen to run at 44" on center, perfect for a locost. I'll dovetail the last 24" of the trailer, and use 4 2x12x12 pressure treated boards for a deck. this will allow for racetrack/ roadside inspections of the car by providing a clear path to the underbelly of the car and will also help keep some of the weight down.
The unloaded weight of the trailer with the boat crap was 1260lbs, By removing the cradles and rollers I've knocked 250lbs off of it. So far, my steel weight is 184lbs. add in the boards and I should be right around the 250lb mark. this gives me 4k of weight capacity to play with before I exceed the 5200 GVW of the trailer.
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I also started cutting some of the U Bolts and welding the joints that are normally bolted together on a trailer like this. It's slow progress to ensure that the joints are completely clean of the galvanized crap, and to get in to some of the areas with my grinder is a pain, so I used a dremel with a grinding bit for some of them. It's slower, but allows me to make sure the area is really clean.
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Tucker
Driven5 wrote:
Forced Induction + Magic Spinning Doritos = EMod