The true meaning of one mans junk, is another mans treasure.
Article
and photos submitted by: John Sieck
Image courtesy of John Sieck |
I like to take someone's
"junk" and turn it into something useful. I like to think of it as "re-purposing" items other
people consider junk and would otherwise throw away. That is how I got
into restoring cast iron cookware, and from that got into Dutch Oven cooking.
Image courtesy of John Sieck |
Measurements were taken. A mockup of the top metal table top and sides
were first made from cardboard I had laying around. With this, I could see how
it would all fit together. In this stage
it was decided that the sides could be taller.
The sides were raised to 9" inches.
Image courtesy of John Sieck |
A friend of mine had access to sheet metal tools. From a simple sketch and my cardboard patterns, he made the top from scrap 16 gauge mild steel from a local HVAC shop.
Image courtesy of John Sieck |
The fabricated metal cooking surface fits the frame
as planned, It fits 2-12" camp ovens with room to spare. The only
expense I have it this is the scrap price for the steel top, and 12-1/4"
carriage bolts and hardware for about $30 total.
great idea. I converted an old wet tile saw into a DO table.
ReplyDeleteDOC Bloom we would like to see the converted Tile saw too.
DeleteRick you have such good articles! you should add a pinterest "pin it" button to each of your blog posts so I can save it to my pinterest account....
ReplyDeleteThere is a row of various media buttons below the article. Pinterest is one of them. I see them anyway. Hope they are there for the public ti use too?
DeleteGenius!!! Much respect Rick! I see bbq grills being thrown out in my neighborhood quite often way before their time. Now you have inspired me! Thanks for sharing your creative process. Luis for California
ReplyDelete