Jump to content
I Forge Iron

How do you store your metal stock?


Recommended Posts

10-12 ' on a hanging rack on wall. Sheet is stowed leaning up next to an old refrigerator. I also have a small rack on the back of the welding table for short pieces. Actually I leave a few things 20' sometimes but small rod only or perhaps 1/8 x 1 bar. BTW there is steel stored out behind the shop. Three 55 gallon barrels are the props. 20 ft square, angle and few other things.

1986.attach

Link to comment
Share on other sites

20 ft lengths in a rack down one wall of open fronted lean-to off the shop. The drawing of the lean-to on the taxman's website says it's 24 ft long but they hang outside a foot :-) The rack is in 4 tiers with a couple dozen spaces divided off with short vertical pieces of 5/16 round. Anything over 7-9 ft goes back on this rack on top of the rrest in that slot. Easy to drag full lengths out (depending on what's parked where), do a 180 turn and go to the chopsaw in the shop. The torch will also reach this rack for cutting of just what's needed of larger stock.

Also in the lean-to I have a vertical rack just 3 ft wide divided in six places, three for pieces up to eight foot and six for pieces up to three ft.

Anything much under three feet stays in the shop stood up in a couple of cut off heavy fire extinguishers. I clean these out once a year, divide the stock into two or three bundles and donate it at a hammer-in. The variety of stock will make someone who never gets any new stock VERY happy and these bundles bring pretty good money.

Sheet metal is leaned against one wall in the lean-to, meticulously sorted by the system of whatever I used last in front and whatever I will need the next time stored behind everything else. When I buy 18 and 20 guage I have it sheared into 4'X8" strips. Much easier for me to handle and doesn't really cause any more waste.

And then there is the stock stored wherever it falls on the chopsaw table, the stock that can float around the coal in the forge for months on end. The stock that rattles around in the back of the truck. The stock stored on the floor of the van that I only use once a year anymore for going to the state fair. The outside rack for oddball stuff and other treasures. And the pile of stuff (good stuff not scrap) that accumulates outside the back walk in door on the lean-to. And an outside pile along one wall of the shop of heavy pipe, angle etc that a little rust won't hurt.

Not always sure what I have or how much is left but I always know where to look!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

my work shop is so unorganized, i just lay stock where ever there is room. i hope to have a small addition added on this summer so i can better organize and clean things up a bit. untill then i will continue to step over things in my way

Ron Smith

P.S. i hope to see some good ideas on this subject so i can store material in a good way when i get the addition finished

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I believe someone on this site had this setup, although I could be mistaken. Use some section of PVC pipe and just drop your bar stock in. Obviously, the stock can't be shorter than the PVC, so you'll need different lengths of pipe for different size stock. Longer stock in the back, shorter stuff up front, so it would be stepped. You could make some type of frame for the pipe so its all arranged neatly, and not just free standing. It would also help if the entire setup was tilted a bit forward to allow you to more easily remove the stock.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I made some stock supports for high up on the wall 20 ft lengths go next to the ceiling and up to 14 ft lengths are about head high. The chop saw is on sa shelf below that. Anything under 8 ft will go between garage doors. less than 2 feet in an old steel mop bucket and scraps in a steel 5 gal pail. I use the steel so that when I cut off a piece I can get it in there and not worry about anything burning.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Leaned up against the walls in a somewhat sorted and organized fashion inside an old grain bin. I also am looking at building a lean-to off the west end of the shop and installing a proper rack. I just need to figure out how to secure it, because some of the neighbors around my parents place (where the shop is) are somewhat socialist in that they believe that everything belongs to everyone....
-Aaron @ the SCF

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I havent room for 20 ft. -10ft. only on overhead rack on the wall.
The off fall and short stuff is leaning along one wall and growing .
I have an old tub outside that I was keeping junk scrap in but its
getting hard to find the tub.
Its the start to the old Traditional Junk Pile

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Half the time I'm at the scrap yard in the VW Bug, so I bend the 10 and 20' stock (1/4 inch square and round, maybe up to 3/8ths) so it'll fit in the back, if I'm shopping for thicker half inch stuff and its long, I bring the handled cold cut and a sledge and snap it off at about 4 feet, it leans in the corner behind the forge, the bent stuff gets hung by nails from the patio cover framing near the forge. Mostly I work with 1/2 inch and under.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...