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melonkernel

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Posts posted by melonkernel

  1. I am renovating my bathroom/sauna and my wife would like a bath tub embedded in the sauna, it would then need to be raised from the floor and integrated with the woodwork. I will buy a steel inset bathtub and would like to build a frame for ti so ti can be raised so that it's upper edge is at about 110cm from the floor.

    This is the kind of tub, and it has small feet that comes with it
    http://www.idosevend.se/files/files/ammeet/svenska/SevenD_Badkar_montanv.pdf#page=6

    How sturdy would one need to make such a frame, and what material/paint would one need to use in order for it to not become rusty etc. I would need to put "feet" on the frame so as not to damage the floor tiles. I guess i could modify the frame that comes with the tub and put it's feet on the frame.
    I guess the weight will be at 200kg minimum when filled.

    If you have thoughts, i recieve them gladly :)
    I attatched a picuture of how it would look like when the cover is taken off the tub and you can use it. Then it would ben in level with the seats. (the cover would be a seat as well when the tub is not used.)

    post-4635-0-56581900-1333281295_thumb.pn

  2. melonkernel: Hate to rain on your parade, but that's not a CNC lathe. It's VMC or CNC vertical milling machine.


    oops. Well, then i would want one of those ;)


    [edit] Actually, i though i heard lathe at 0:41 in the video, but it was "computer guided blades", i think.
    p.s. lathe is an english word i have come into contact with anywhere else than here, so i have not heard anyone pronounce it. My guess is that i rhymes with blade. but then again there are exceptions to everyting and I could be wrong.
  3. The pedal looks very nice!

    Perhaps someone will also combine the pedal idea with the release mechanism, so that when you depress the pedal it would let out the pressure from the jack. I have no idea at the moment how it would be done, but combining them into two motions on the pedal would increase the amount of presses and freeing both your hands.

    it would of course need some fine tuning and calibration so that you get the ventile completely fastened before the air-button is pressed

    16719.attach

    16720.attach

  4. I am starting to learn to make basket twists by hand. but when i saw this video it looked too easy. Has anyone made a similar machine or tool for making twists.
    and/or are they easy/cheap to buy (preferrably in europe)

    YouTube - ohýbače na predaj (from 22 sec)

    I saw a blueprint for a twister in the blueprints section.
    It would be fun to have one that you can make basket twists as well.
    I guess it would need to have enough height and have the possibility to fix the slider.

  5. Skate boarders are grinding on the top rail and the church is wanting to not atrack them, and to stop damage to the rails.


    I would do as ironrosefarms' church did. Isn't church supposed to attract people and reach out to the different subcultures.
    Perhaps build some stoppers on the steps, but also a "better" rail to grind. somewhere where it is ok.
  6. I would use the stainless for this project.
    1.Find a base about 1/4"=1/2' thick, make it circular with a tab on the back.
    2.TIG on a vertical hinge to this tab.
    3.Find a similar size stainless tube, cut it about 3" tall, then mark an inch from the top, and cut most of the way through the pipe, leaving a 1" square tab.
    4.Opposite of this tab, and at the bottom, weld your other hinge tab, making sure it seats with the other properly.
    5.Bend the 1" tab at the front down, finish the hinge at the back, and
    6.Find a disk that will fit into your pipe. Attach a knob to this and clean it all up.

    When using, press the patty, then twist the disc as you lift it, to break any suction. hope it makes sense, ask if it doesn't!


    I might have to re-read it a couple of times to fully understand. but no i am off from the computer. => family
  7. Hey, awesome tips, everyone...
    I grilled the patties i made along with commercial ones i had bought earlier (the expensive whole-meat talked about, that are supposed to be the best around here)
    They were similar in shape and handling (flippability) but mine were oh-so-much-tastier and the commercial ones were much more rubbery.
    And my wife agreed aswell. (And the ones i bought, i thought until now were the best patties ever made)

    thanks again...

    question: How many of have decided to make hamburgers during this discussion?

  8. I tried yesterday to make some patties using the top cut off a plastic container and a jar as the press. it worked fine and i made some nice patties, 100g, 10cm diameter and half a centimeter thick. I placed the circle on silicone topped cooking paper sheets, and put 100g of meat in them an pressed, then stacked them onto each other and put them in the freezer, using the papers as separator. They were however a bit difficult to separate once they were frozen. I probably should press them first on a separate paper, then add put them between separation-papert and onto the freezer.

    My next plan is ofcourse to grill some of them tonight.
    But now my project is this:

    Make a pattie press using stainless-steel pipe and a plastic cutting board as orgtwister suggested, and then make additional stainless-steel-pipe parts 10cm diameter and 2cm "high" to make bun-makers. With 9-12 of these at the same time in the oven one could easily make the perfect buns as well.

  9. Hi, i am from Finland, and here you won't find a hamburger patty press in a (at least local) store. So i would need to make one i guess. (So i can feed my newly purchased Weber Grill [which by the way is lovely])

    I can get stainless steel pipes.

    Has anyone here made one?

    I am thinking of something like the attached photo.

    (If i want to buy whole-meat patties here, they are around 1

    8238.attach

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