Starting with 1 3/4" .090 DOM but may want to do others.
Looking at this one http://www.ebay.com/itm/172307554185 MB-105HD
Starting with 1 3/4" .090 DOM but may want to do others.
Looking at this one http://www.ebay.com/itm/172307554185 MB-105HD
I have a JD2 model 30 and it works great.
I used plans from here: Bender stand plans to build a stand. Uses an HF hydraulic ram for power.
So far, I've built a mailbox stand, and rock sliders and front and rear bumpers for my Bronco.
Works great. I have plans to build a cage for my Miata this fall.
+1 on that. We have done 6 cages with our JD^2 and it has been great. I think we will make one of those stands though, we currently mount it in a trailer hitch and use brute force.
Excellent feedback, thanks for the link.
Are the notchers worth buying? Seems like they would have a huge appetite for saw blades.
Read the article on LowBuck Tools site on notchers and why hole saw types are not your friend.
I also have a JD2 unit and love it.
Sonic wrote: +1 on that. We have done 6 cages with our JD^2 and it has been great. I think we will make one of those stands though, we currently mount it in a trailer hitch and use brute force.
The stand is awesome. I have mine mounted on rollers so I can move it around the garage (which is almost a requirement due to my lack of space). It bends in the vertical plane, so it doesn't need to be anchored to anything.
Another vote for jd2 model 3. I quickly upgraded to a air over hydraulic setup, as I hand bent a 180 when I first got it and realized I wouldn't make a dime bending by hand...
But for occasional/personal use the ratchet action would be ok.
Nothing wrong with the Pro-tools either...very similar.
I've cut a 100's of notches with the HF notcher and just retired it in favor of a jd2 notchmaster, which is of course much nicer.
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