Choco8
Insanely Active Member
I finally did something about a long-running issue with not being able to access the "wall side" of my setup, which had two separate stationary tables holding 2' trays on either side of a 3 foot aisle. I'm building 2 rolling tables out of PVC which each hold 2 of the 2' trays, using a box frame shape which rests upon two 2" diameter PVC tubes. Uprights are attached to the corners with two levels of trellis. I'm not sure if the heights and spacing I went with are ideal but will find out soon enough and can change things pretty quickly and cheaply with different lengths of PVC. I use short sheet metal screws on the joints (rather than glue) so things will stay together, but can still be taken apart and reconfigured. I could have used casters, but it would have been quite a bit more money.
It works really well - I get almost 18" of rolling, and could get a little more if I put some small casters on the edges to keep it from tipping. I also had to lengthen the supply and drain lines to accommodate the roll. The perimeter frame is too flimsy to push and pull the table -I used a bigger 1" PVC tube in the center that makes a more solid handle. The bottom frame is 1" PVC, the center is 3/4". and the trellis spans are 1/2". I deliberately cut the horizontal trellis braces long to give a little spread at the top, which gains about 4" in both directions.
So nice to be able to access everything at last!
I used threaded eyelets on the lower level trellis, but then went with 1/4" beveled through-holes on the top level when I ran out of eyelets.
The PVC rollers stay in position pretty well. The static is kind of annoying. The 3 way PVC corners are available at Home Depot but the 4 way ones I have only found online.
It works really well - I get almost 18" of rolling, and could get a little more if I put some small casters on the edges to keep it from tipping. I also had to lengthen the supply and drain lines to accommodate the roll. The perimeter frame is too flimsy to push and pull the table -I used a bigger 1" PVC tube in the center that makes a more solid handle. The bottom frame is 1" PVC, the center is 3/4". and the trellis spans are 1/2". I deliberately cut the horizontal trellis braces long to give a little spread at the top, which gains about 4" in both directions.
So nice to be able to access everything at last!
I used threaded eyelets on the lower level trellis, but then went with 1/4" beveled through-holes on the top level when I ran out of eyelets.
The PVC rollers stay in position pretty well. The static is kind of annoying. The 3 way PVC corners are available at Home Depot but the 4 way ones I have only found online.