100% Biker – August 2019

(ff) #1

http://www.100-biker.com | issue 250 | 100% Biker | 107


SHEDHEAD IS OUR REGULAR LOOK AT ALL
ASPECTS OF BIKE BUILDING, COURTESY
OF OUR RESIDENT METAL-WORKING
SHED HEAD GENIUS, BLACKJACK

CABINET RESHUFFLE


IT OCCURRED TO ME THAT IF YOU CUT A FILING CABINET IN HALF AND ADDED


SOME CASTORS, IT WOULD MAKE A SERVICEABLE TOOLBOX TROLLEY


I


f you’re building bikes, then in the first place you’re going to
need stuff, and in the second, you’re not dead.
The stuff presents a problem as you need space to keep the
stuff and some way of keeping it organised, and preferably
some sort of work surface. The not being dead brings a slightly
less obvious problem in that, if you’re not dead, then you are
getting older, and if you’re getting older, then the adage ‘work
smarter, don’t work harder’ starts to make a lot more sense.
So, while I’m finding the time to blend the welds on
Skinny Minnie, I also have to find the energy, enthusiasm
and the bloody grinder. That tends to entail lots of walking
back and forth which mounts up over the course of the
day because the bench with the vice on it is about twenty
feet from where I’m working on the frame, so things like
making the side stand tend to result in even more walking.
If you don’t have a permanent work space for the bike, you
probably know what I mean.
Which brings me to filing cabinets (Fig.1). They’re not hard

Fig.^1

Fig.^2

Fig.^3
to find, they’re often free, but they’re not great for storage
past a certain point. However, a while ago it did occur to me
that if you cut one in half and added some castors, it would
make a serviceable toolbox trolley; that worked out fairly
well and led me to thinking about a cross between a mobile
workbench and a storage trolley for small fabrication jobs. I
already had a free filing cabinet, but they often seem to turn
up on Gumtree and Facebook Marketplace at anywhere
between free and a tenner – ones with keys are a bit more
desirable. The first step is to take the drawers out, which
you do by pressing down the catch levers on the runners and
then pulling the drawer free (Fig.2). That will trip the locking
mechanism which is a feature to stop all the drawers being
opened at once and toppling the cabinet, so you then need
to depress the tab (Fig.3) and reset the mechanism before
moving on to the next drawer.
Since I was using the 1-inch (25mm) square 1/16-inch
(1.5mm) wall box section I bought to make the TIG trolley
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