krudawg said:Just flipping thru the latest Wood Magazine and came across a Boom Arm Build.
I wish I was that talented ,thats from some of the great talent on this forum here is the linkhttps://www.festoolownersgroup.com/workshops-and-mobile-vehicle-based-shops/shop-use-consideration-of-ct-boom-arm-for-dust-extractors reply#12krudawg said:Holy Cow. That is very unique and quite functional. Did you design it?
Bolt a plate to the floor with a "bearing" of some kind welded to a bent tube. Trailer hubs and spindles are super cheap, or old car parts. If the tubing is sized correctly it could function for the air to pass thru with a 36mm hose plugged into the boom. Quick removal might be necessary for some projects to clear.Crazyraceguy said:I like the idea of a boom arm, but haven't worked it out exactly for my space. I found one that I liked on Amazon, at a good price too, but I waited too long. Now they are out of stock.
I think the one I found was intended to be for a dock-light, for shining up inside a semi truck? Maybe it will come back by the time I figure out how to mount it? My workspace is nowhere near an actual wall.
I have a backing wall, behind my Sysport cabinets, but it is very short. Less than 5ft IIRC, 54-56 inches? It's fine as a backdrop, but I would need a column of some sort, going higher.
guybo said:Hi, I always liked this build
I am thinking more along the lines of bolting some kind of tubing to the end of the back wall itself.Peter_C said:Bolt a plate to the floor with a "bearing" of some kind welded to a bent tube. Trailer hubs and spindles are super cheap, or old car parts. If the tubing is sized correctly it could function for the air to pass thru with a 36mm hose plugged into the boom. Quick removal might be necessary for some projects to clear.
I have the Festool boom arm which works well in my situation, as I couldn't have a permanent boom arm.
Since the wall is a decent distance to the far end of the big work bench, going with an articulating arm with a lot of movement would probably be the only way. What is the distance of the wall to far side of work bench?Crazyraceguy said:I am thinking more along the lines of bolting some kind of tubing to the end of the back wall itself.
That would put it close to where I keep the CT 99% of the time.
I didn't realize how bad my bench looked in this shot. It has changed quite a bit in the last few weeks.
Mini Me said:Does anyone recall or know what happened with the boom arm that was being developed by two different people from this forum a few years ago IIRC. It had bearings in the extension part and was quite complex in some ways but it definitely looked solid.
ChuckS said:Talking to a woodworker neighbor, and he shared this image he came across years ago:
[attachimg=1]
May look ugly, but does the job (in a simple way)...and doesn't cost over $600 Cdn. [tongue]
MikeGE said:Mini Me said:Does anyone recall or know what happened with the boom arm that was being developed by two different people from this forum a few years ago IIRC. It had bearings in the extension part and was quite complex in some ways but it definitely looked solid.
The two examples I remember are these threads:
Prometheus Boom Arm by Rick Christopherson (RTS Engineering)
DIY Fully Articulating Boom Arm by Martin Felder