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Pete C. Pete C. is offline
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Default Container floor anchors


Steve B wrote:

wrote in message
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On Aug 17, 9:51 am, "Steve B" wrote:
"Sunworshipper" wrote in message

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On Tue, 17 Aug 2010 07:50:22 -0700, "Steve B"
wrote:


I have two containers with oak (?) flooring. I have a roll around router
table, and a small table saw that I'd like to mount to the floor, but be
able to unmount it quickly. Where can I find some type of t bolts that I
can drill an oversized hole in the wood, put the female anchor in there
flush with the floor, secure it in, and have enough room around it to
blow
out chips once I take it loose? I have a router table on a base, table
saw,
and metal bender I'd like to anchor down. I think if I use a lag, the
hole
will wallow in the wood. I could take some square plate, cut some vent
blow
holes, drill it, weld a nut on the underside, rout out a place on the
floor,
and mount that with countersinks, but I was wondering if there was
anything
available that was pre made that I could just slam down.


Steve


visit my blog athttp://cabgbypasssurgery.com
free books while they last!


If you use lag bolts make sure they are not made in china. When I
bolted down the machines in my simi trailer I twisted off a couple and
they where a bitch to cut off under the machines or lifting them over
the broken bolts.


SW


Please reread my post. I do not want to use lags.

Steve- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


Threaded inserts, tee nuts(woodworking type) or make your own. Chunks
of flat plate with tapped holes, inletted into and screwed to the
floor. Just depends on how big you want your hold-down bolts to be.
You can get tee-nuts with holes in the flanges for nails or screws so
they don't have to be underneath the wood to hold. If it's just light
woodworking machinery, it isn't going to dance around a lot, you could
maybe get by with 1/4-20s. Can get tee nuts and threated inserts at
Ace.

Stan

ZAP! Just had an idea. Maybe some of those D ring things with plates that
they sell at truck places. Use with four mini binders for some equipment,
but I would have to have something sturdier for the bender.

Steve

visit my blog at http://cabgbypasssurgery.com
free books while they last!


Threaded inserts such as the ones I pointed out on McMaster are easy to
install, and don't make an appreciable difference in the floor surface,
something that is important if you roll stuff around or need a flat
floor for layout.