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#1
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Hello All,
I live in middle TN. near Nashville and I've only been here a short while. Does anyone know where I might acquire used or new boat stands? I need to lay my 26' sailboat on the hard for a while. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks, Rick -- ************************************************** ************************** ************************************************** ***** "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore... Dream... Discover." ~Mark Twain~ |
#2
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![]() "ex_squid" wrote in message ... Hello All, I live in middle TN. near Nashville and I've only been here a short while. Does anyone know where I might acquire used or new boat stands? A short conversation at your local welding shop should produce some reasonably priced stands. |
#3
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reader wrote:
"ex_squid" wrote in message ... Hello All, I live in middle TN. near Nashville and I've only been here a short while. Does anyone know where I might acquire used or new boat stands? A short conversation at your local welding shop should produce some reasonably priced stands. It's almost impossible to make them cheaper than they are sold. Brownell is the company that makes them (I think). They stack tightly for shipping. A search for "boat stands" will probably get you them. Evan Gatehouse |
#4
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![]() "Evan Gatehouse" wrote in message ... reader wrote: "ex_squid" wrote in message ... Hello All, I live in middle TN. near Nashville and I've only been here a short while. Does anyone know where I might acquire used or new boat stands? A short conversation at your local welding shop should produce some reasonably priced stands. It's almost impossible to make them cheaper than they are sold. Brownell is the company that makes them (I think). They stack tightly for shipping. A search for "boat stands" will probably get you them. Evan Gatehouse Thanks reader, thanks Evan, I am aware of Brownell and I think their prices are reasonable but I thought I'd try to find them locally first to avoid the shipping. I'm also looking into the cost of having them built for an "overall" comparison. Thanks |
#5
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![]() "ex_squid" wrote Thanks reader, thanks Evan, I am aware of Brownell and I think their prices are reasonable but I thought I'd try to find them locally first to avoid the shipping. I'm also looking into the cost of having them built for an "overall" comparison. You are probably only going to need 6 or 7 stands. I doubt you will find a welding shop that can make them cheaper than Brownell. I have all the equipment to build them myself so I looked into it once and figured that the material alone to build a 50" stand would run about $75. The 1 1/4" Acme threaded rod for the top will cost about $12/foot and you will need 18"/stand. The wing nut is another $40. You will have to absorb a lot of tooling cost.. A welding shop will have to make a jig in order to keep the angles right and we haven't even started talking about the swivel heads. I doubt you could build them in small quantities for under $140 each including labor. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
#6
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Glenn Ashmore writes:
The 1 1/4" Acme threaded rod for the top will cost about $12/foot and you will need 18"/stand. The wing nut is another $40. $6/foot with free shipping from use-enco.com. Nuts are $4.29. But you're right, the make-or-buy analysis sez "buy". |
#7
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posted to rec.boats.building
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That is a good price of the rod but Enco doesn't sell acme wing nuts. You
would have to buy a regular acme hex nut and weld on some rod for handles. Not exactly the strongest solution. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "Richard J Kinch" wrote in message . .. Glenn Ashmore writes: The 1 1/4" Acme threaded rod for the top will cost about $12/foot and you will need 18"/stand. The wing nut is another $40. $6/foot with free shipping from use-enco.com. Nuts are $4.29. But you're right, the make-or-buy analysis sez "buy". |
#8
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Glenn Ashmore writes:
That is a good price of the rod but Enco doesn't sell acme wing nuts. You would have to buy a regular acme hex nut and weld on some rod for handles. I assume that would be the approach, if you're welding the stands themselves. Are the Brownells wing nuts a cast item, or welded, or what? Is this something they make themselves or have made or is a more widely used component? |
#9
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The ones I have seen are cast wingnuts but I would guess that if you buy a
few thousand at the time the price goes down significantly. The $40 price was from McMaster where you pay to get just one and get it today. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com "Richard J Kinch" wrote in message . .. Glenn Ashmore writes: That is a good price of the rod but Enco doesn't sell acme wing nuts. You would have to buy a regular acme hex nut and weld on some rod for handles. I assume that would be the approach, if you're welding the stands themselves. Are the Brownells wing nuts a cast item, or welded, or what? Is this something they make themselves or have made or is a more widely used component? |
#10
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Glenn Ashmore wrote:
That is a good price of the rod but Enco doesn't sell acme wing nuts. You would have to buy a regular acme hex nut and weld on some rod for handles. Not exactly the strongest solution. No, but look at the application. A 26' boat may weigh 5000 pounds, and 90% is carried by the keel on the ground. The other 500 pounds is divided over the stands. 250 foot pounds of torque on a 1"-8 UNC thread will develop a thrust of 15000 pounds. I.e., enough to lift three of these bolts. Two pieces of 1/4x1" flat bar welded to the sides of the nut to act as handles can carry this much torque without the welds breaking. (Of course, a normal human would have to put lengths of pipe over each handle to generate this much torque...) So while bar stock welded to a hex nut isn't the strongest solution, it'll still be way, way stronger than needed. I'll also suggest that there's no advantage to using acme thread in this application. For a given size you get a coarser thread, which means more movement per turn, but it's more costly and actually has less strength since the threads are deeper. Tim (who's just designed a cradle for a 34' boat.) |
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