G
Guest
Guest
Gawd I am slow on the uptake at times. I have some over-height, over-wide sawhorses, originally built for as extra canoe storage when needed, those also see use when working up inside a hull, especially inside the decked boats.
PB211373 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Um, yeah, so it (finally) occurs to me that my standard sized sawhorses already have a brace between the legs to help stiffen their stance. This one was perfect for what I had in mind.
PB280034 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Those leg stiffeners, set low on the sawhorse legs need nothing more than a 2x4 crossbar screwed in place to make a compact vertical 2-boat stand, and lose no sawhorse function in that guise.
I often have a boat or two waiting dry and warm for work in the shop. Now I can rack two off to the side, using only 3 feet of floor space, and have the top boat accessible for non-drippy repairs or measuring, planning, cogitating and dry fitting.
Guess I need to put some lower leg stiffeners on the rest of the shop horses. Of course I didn’t consider that low crossbar functionality at the time, and installed those cross pieces too high up the legs to accommodate a canoe-depth crossbar positioned down below.
PB280030 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I wouldn’t put a canoe on that low crossbar in outside storage, the gunwales are only 7” off the ground, and in a hard rain mud spatter would splash up at the brightwork ends and hasten bacterial rot.
But as a two-canoe shop rack, well, I am mighty slow on the uptake at times. A couple scrap pieces of 2x4 is all it takes.
PB211373 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Um, yeah, so it (finally) occurs to me that my standard sized sawhorses already have a brace between the legs to help stiffen their stance. This one was perfect for what I had in mind.
PB280034 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Those leg stiffeners, set low on the sawhorse legs need nothing more than a 2x4 crossbar screwed in place to make a compact vertical 2-boat stand, and lose no sawhorse function in that guise.
I often have a boat or two waiting dry and warm for work in the shop. Now I can rack two off to the side, using only 3 feet of floor space, and have the top boat accessible for non-drippy repairs or measuring, planning, cogitating and dry fitting.
Guess I need to put some lower leg stiffeners on the rest of the shop horses. Of course I didn’t consider that low crossbar functionality at the time, and installed those cross pieces too high up the legs to accommodate a canoe-depth crossbar positioned down below.
PB280030 by Mike McCrea, on Flickr
I wouldn’t put a canoe on that low crossbar in outside storage, the gunwales are only 7” off the ground, and in a hard rain mud spatter would splash up at the brightwork ends and hasten bacterial rot.
But as a two-canoe shop rack, well, I am mighty slow on the uptake at times. A couple scrap pieces of 2x4 is all it takes.