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Ideas wanted (metal related)

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Ivan Vegvary

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Mar 30, 2010, 9:22:19 PM3/30/10
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Going to the Portland, OR swap meet soon. 8-10 hours of walking for this
old guy.
Was thinking of pushing my two wheel dolly through the show, and, would like
to attach a fold down seat to the uprights. I have plenty of ideas for
seats, need ideas for the attachment.

Uprights on the dolly are approximately 1 inch diameter tubing. Ideally,
the seat would be easy to remove and replace.

Thanks for thinking,

Ivan Vegvary

Pete C.

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Mar 30, 2010, 9:45:53 PM3/30/10
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Get one of the little tripod folding camp stools and a bungee cord. Use
the bungee cord to strap the camp stool to the dolly. Remove the camp
stool when needed in a few seconds.

Steve W.

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Mar 30, 2010, 10:03:32 PM3/30/10
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1" conduit clamps bolted to a chunk of plywood. Two good hinges to
attach to the seat platform. Another pair of hinges for a fold out seat
brace under the platform.

--
Steve W.

spaco

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Mar 30, 2010, 11:15:17 PM3/30/10
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I have been taking a 2 wheel dolly to workshops where there isn't enough
bench space for the last few years. I made a shelf for it that might
answer your "seat" needs:
I simply bent two L shaped brackets out of 1/2" square bar with legs
each about 1 foot long. I attached them to the uprights of the dolly
with radiator hose clamps. 2 clamps for each leg. One of the clamps is
prevented from sliding downward by a cross member on the dolly. The
horizontal legs of the L brackets would obviously point toward the front
of the dolly.
I simply C-clamp my little bench top to the horizontal legs, but you
might want to do something more creative.
In my case, I set my shelf at about 30 inches high, but you would use
a lower cross member, so you could sit.
Again, in my case, I have to place a heavy object on the "toe" of the
dolly, so it doesn't tip back when I am using the shelf. This wouldn't
be an issue for you.
To remove the shelf brackets, I just loosen the hose clamps slightly,
pull out the L brackets and leave the hose clamps in place.
I'm a blacksmith, so the dolly is really handy anyway for the 2 or 3
5-gallon pails full of tools that many of us bring. If you, too brought
some kind of container, you could buy more stuff!

Hope this helps,
Pete Stanaitis
-------------------------

Larry Jaques

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Mar 30, 2010, 11:27:00 PM3/30/10
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On Tue, 30 Mar 2010 18:22:19 -0700, the infamous "Ivan Vegvary"
<ivanv...@gmail.com> scrawled the following:

>Going to the Portland, OR swap meet soon. 8-10 hours of walking for this
>old guy.

Holy Moley! That's a big meet, isn't it?


>Was thinking of pushing my two wheel dolly through the show, and, would like
>to attach a fold down seat to the uprights. I have plenty of ideas for
>seats, need ideas for the attachment.

You're talking about a hand truck, right?

You could always cut a slot in the seat and drop it down over the
uprights, welding buttons on the uprights for stops. Or you could
weld brackets on the top, mount casters, and build a new handle. Then
extend the original platform plate with an L-shaped seat

http://fwd4.me/JjB I have one of these. Mount a seat on the bottom
plate. Or, just put a trunk on it and sit on that. Fill it up with
your swap goodies + lunch, snacks, and lots of extra water.

I took one of these to COMDEX every year, tied to the back of my belt:
http://fwd4.me/JjD It went up and down stairs easily and every 30
seconds, I'd hear "Damn, great idea. I'll have to do that next year."
I even had my business signs on the side like an old horse-drawn job.

--
May those who love us, love us;
And may those that don't love us,
May God turn their hearts;
And if he doesn't turn their hearts,
may he turn their ankles,
So we'll know them by their limping.
--old Gaelic blessing

Steve B

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Mar 30, 2010, 11:47:58 PM3/30/10
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"Ivan Vegvary" <ivanv...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:hou84k$vbb$1...@news.eternal-september.org...

I have always liked those two wheeled dollies that had a fold down arm that
made it a four wheel cart. If you can't find one with a seat on there, it
would not be hard to weld one on. Don't forget your Bar Buoy, horn, and MP3
player. Have fun.

Steve


Message has been deleted

Jim Wilkins

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Mar 31, 2010, 9:17:18 AM3/31/10
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> Ivan Vegvary

I'd cut a plywood rectangle and attach rope to each corner. The rear
ropes tie the seat to the uprights and suspend it from a crossbar, the
front ones run down diagonally from near the handles. You could bungee
on a boat cushion.

If you buy something large you can fold or remove the seat and maybe
even use the wood and rope to help secure it.

A simple way to attach the rope to the seat is to drill a hole the
rope barely fits through near each corner and thread the rope down
through the rear hole and diagonally across underneath, then up
through the front hole. Tie a figure eight knot under the holes so the
rope won't pull through. Then if the plywood cracks the rope still
supports you.

jsw

Stormin Mormon

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Mar 31, 2010, 10:39:19 AM3/31/10
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How about a 5 galon bucket with a "hunters bucket seat"
top? You can use the bucket to store your purchases.

--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.


"Ivan Vegvary" <ivanv...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:hou84k$vbb$1...@news.eternal-september.org...

Buerste

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Mar 31, 2010, 3:19:03 PM3/31/10
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"Ivan Vegvary" <ivanv...@gmail.com> wrote in message
news:hou84k$vbb$1...@news.eternal-september.org...

Go to a golf store, they have seats that clamp onto pull-carts.


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