malt junkie
Well-Known Member
You can now put some rigging hooks on it, and hoist (full) with a cranebarls said:i used sikaflex on mine.
there's no kill like over kill
You can now put some rigging hooks on it, and hoist (full) with a cranebarls said:i used sikaflex on mine.
its not coming apart unless i want to.malt junkie said:You can now put some rigging hooks on it, and hoist (full) with a crane
there's no kill like over kill
Bit of an exaggeration, but it is like this... I think the gap was 5mm on the bottom left side at the front.Danscraftbeer said:That's what I thought. Pack it somehow. Depends if you can see it and cant accept it. Make the front flush. Will anyone else notice?
Any more pics? Its hard to imaging this wobble bit but I'm trying ha. Nice job..
With Photobucket just copy the bottom link to share the photo then its displayed on this page.. B)
laxation said:snip
Thanks for tips on the seal to use too... I'll check those out. The wood is 30mm thick though so not sure the 15mm one from Bunnings would do the job. Will just be careful to plug any gaps with silicone. If I am struggling to level it, I can get a black sealant to make the front look a little better. But I think will be OK to plane it down.
snip
Perfect, thanks!Mat B said:A planer would be fine. I'd use a spirit level to see where the raised section is and colour it in with a pencil or marker then just plane that section.
I made my collar similar to this with another piece on the inside which sits on the inner recess of the freezer lip. Basically like an upside down U. Pushed the collar on tight and it holds to the top of the freezer really well. With a coffin top i figured there was going to be a lot of weight pulling on the collar when the lid was opened so i figured this design would spread the torsion.Meddo said:Reckon you'll be fine with the 15mm strip if it suits your concept (and you get it level enough), my collar is 30mm pine on the sides and back and 45mm on the front - seals fine with a single line of that tape and 45 degree angles/joins at the each corner. There's bugger all pressure differential so you don't need anything super-robust to keep the cold air in and warm stuff out.
Having said that, the construction on mine is a bit different as I have facing timber that extends down past the seal and keeps the whole thing located properly - yours might move around a bit more if it's just perched on top. If you don't want to permanently seal it down with silicon or similar and you're not hinging the collar, you could keep it located by just putting some corner pieces on the inside that extend a little way down into the freezer to stop it moving around.
Collar 01.jpg
Collar 02.jpg
Enter your email address to join: