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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
Equipment Discussions
Dream portable shooting bench
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<blockquote data-quote="devins" data-source="post: 501916" data-attributes="member: 27441"><p><a href="http://i1194.photobucket.chttp://i1194.photobucket.com/albums/aa365/devinps114/Grinderandshootingbenchprojects013.jpgom/albums/aa365/devinps114/Grinderandshootingbenchprojects013.jpg" target="_blank">http://i1194.photobucket.chttp://i1194.photobucket.com/albums/aa365/devinps114/Grinderandshootingbenchprojects013.jpgom/albums/aa365/devinps114/Grinderandshootingbenchprojects013.jpg</a></p><p>I wedged and flanged very similar to you Joseph on my front two legs. I was going to go for the same design you did to start with but I wanted to be able to attach the seat. My idea was to be able to get everything together to get it out to the shooting position, but I am still going to have to make areas for the legs to attach on the bottomside or something along that line for transporting. But the good new is it is very stable like this. No not like a concrete bench but stable enough to test loads out to 200 no problem and ultimately to use in the field on prairie dogs for several hundred I think. I am excited to keep trying it and making improvements on late additions. I can build one in a few hours, not counting the top glue drying, probably just over two hours. And cost is around $100 but I bought enough of most parts to do several when I bought so that may bring the cost down.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="devins, post: 501916, member: 27441"] [URL]http://i1194.photobucket.chttp://i1194.photobucket.com/albums/aa365/devinps114/Grinderandshootingbenchprojects013.jpgom/albums/aa365/devinps114/Grinderandshootingbenchprojects013.jpg[/URL] I wedged and flanged very similar to you Joseph on my front two legs. I was going to go for the same design you did to start with but I wanted to be able to attach the seat. My idea was to be able to get everything together to get it out to the shooting position, but I am still going to have to make areas for the legs to attach on the bottomside or something along that line for transporting. But the good new is it is very stable like this. No not like a concrete bench but stable enough to test loads out to 200 no problem and ultimately to use in the field on prairie dogs for several hundred I think. I am excited to keep trying it and making improvements on late additions. I can build one in a few hours, not counting the top glue drying, probably just over two hours. And cost is around $100 but I bought enough of most parts to do several when I bought so that may bring the cost down. [/QUOTE]
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Rifles, Reloading, Optics, Equipment
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Dream portable shooting bench
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