I’d buy one in a heartbeat. Can’t find it on their store page yet. Wonder when it’s gonna hit.
@langmuir-daniel - any intel?
I’d buy one in a heartbeat. Can’t find it on their store page yet. Wonder when it’s gonna hit.
@langmuir-daniel - any intel?
I was just pricing out a 2x4x6 fab block. Best quote I got was from OshCut I think $530ish + freight shipping. All the local to me laser shops quoted several thousand dollars to laser one… one was $8,700. I was like why bother even sending me this quote, lol.
I think I may try to cut it out on my Crossfire. I know the holes won’t be perfect, but I do think I can make them good enough. We’ll see. Materials would be about $180.
A couple of years ago, I bought a few of the 3x4x3/16 tables, built them real easy and sold them local for a few bucks more than paid (this was before Certiflat was actually Certiflat, lol.) anyhow, that allowed me to purchase their 1/4" version, it is flat all over to under .010" and super strong. Very happy with them and it.
Yeah when they put out the xl kit for it you know the pro will be coming soon lol.
Hi All,
The weld tables is a project that we began development on over the Summer. These are getting made at our vendor currently, we just haven’t done any marketing or discussion about it because our heads are down getting the PRO machines completed. Expect to see a lot more on these in about a month or so.
I got one of their 3x4 pro tables…I made it collaspable since I’m tight on garage space. Works well for my tight space but I’ll upgrade to a fabblock style table when I eventually build a different shop
If you’re looking for a fixture table with a 3/8" surface, send an email to David Demoise ddemoise@gmail.com He’s on instagram @ddemoise and makes some great thicker fixture tables in several sizes. Good prices. I am budgeting for a 30" x 50"
Or, download the design files from GrabCad…
I think one thing to keep in mind about these tables are that they are designed to be “Fixture Tables.” That means they are really designed to keep everything flat and square and not so much designed for heating on or beating with a sludge hammer. As soon as you start doing things like that you will certainly run the risk of getting them out of tolerance. 1/4" is going to be a whole lot easier to pull around and get nice and flat as opposed to 3/8" if you intend to make it yourself, most of these sheets do not come perfectly flat from the factory and thats where all the webbing comes into play on the bottom. Another thing to keep in mind is that if your gantry arms are not perfectly square to one another its going to affect you fit up quite a bit on these kinds of designs, I learned this the hard way when I cut out some fab squares.