nf6x
Feral Engineer
- 1,630
- 50
- 48
- Location
- Riverside, CA, USA
I'd like to add a trailer tongue jack to my M936A1 wrecker's medium towbar to make it easier to use without Soldier B. Here's my dog checking out my towbar as I test-fit it with a 3D-printed prototype (the yellow thing) of an adapter that I plan to have made to adapt the towbar shackles to the corner casting on a sea container, using clamp-on corner casting couplers:
The sea container, dog, etc. have nothing to do with my question here. Just pretend you didn't see them. I usually use a farm jack, random junk, etc. to get the lunette up to the right height to hitch to my wrecker, but that's a janky wobbly pain in the butt. So, I plan to add this style of jack near the lunette to make it easier to adjust the height of the towbar for hitching up:
The same style of jack happens to be used on my youngest military trailer, so with some green paint it'll even look right. After hitching up, I can pull the jack off or maybe just swing it out of the way. The round mounting widget needs to be welded on to something, and I plan to gas weld it since a gas welding torch is what I have. I ordered a pair of the jacks... another one's going on the drawbar for my commo shelter mobilizer, which is similarly inconvenient without help from Soldier B.
Now, here's my question: Would it be Very Bad to weld the mount directly onto the towbar, or should I instead weld it to some steel tubing with an ID matching the OD of the towbar's tuning, split that tubing, and clamp it onto the towbar somehow? I'm a total welding noob, and I'm concerned about weakening the towbar. I'll probably never personally use the thing on the road or above a few miles per hour, but I don't want to leave something dangerous for my as-yet-unidentified heirs.
Ok, fine, I know y'all are going to be all kinds of curious about my harebrained scheme for dragging my sea containers to a different spot in my yard. Please tell me if it sounds too crazy. So, I have an M936A1 wrecker, and I have a few 20' sea containers which are gradually subsiding into the ground as the wee bunnies burrow underneath. I want them to be somewhere else, sitting level on some timbers or whatever, with rock underneath to discourage burrowing. I've ordered some widgets that hook onto the bottom corner castings at what we'll call the rear end, with spindles and hubs for 8-bolt rims. I plan to borrow a couple of wheels off one of my decrepit CUCVs, lift the rear end, put on a pair of wheels, and then drag the containers as if I was doing a lifted tow of a deadlined truck. At what we'll call the front end, I should be able to lift the container up with a chain sling and some container lifting lugs, but I still need a way to hook up the towbar. I have a couple of mil surplus clamp-on container couplers, so I designed an adapter to get machined out of steel. I'll need two of them. I 3D printed a prototype to check the fit before I try to have them made, because I bet they won't be cheap. Based on McMaster-Carr pricing, there's a hundred bucks worth of steel in each one before they even land on a milling machine table. What do y'all think?
And before anybody asks, my dog's name is Anise, and she's a very good girl.
The sea container, dog, etc. have nothing to do with my question here. Just pretend you didn't see them. I usually use a farm jack, random junk, etc. to get the lunette up to the right height to hitch to my wrecker, but that's a janky wobbly pain in the butt. So, I plan to add this style of jack near the lunette to make it easier to adjust the height of the towbar for hitching up:
The same style of jack happens to be used on my youngest military trailer, so with some green paint it'll even look right. After hitching up, I can pull the jack off or maybe just swing it out of the way. The round mounting widget needs to be welded on to something, and I plan to gas weld it since a gas welding torch is what I have. I ordered a pair of the jacks... another one's going on the drawbar for my commo shelter mobilizer, which is similarly inconvenient without help from Soldier B.
Now, here's my question: Would it be Very Bad to weld the mount directly onto the towbar, or should I instead weld it to some steel tubing with an ID matching the OD of the towbar's tuning, split that tubing, and clamp it onto the towbar somehow? I'm a total welding noob, and I'm concerned about weakening the towbar. I'll probably never personally use the thing on the road or above a few miles per hour, but I don't want to leave something dangerous for my as-yet-unidentified heirs.
Ok, fine, I know y'all are going to be all kinds of curious about my harebrained scheme for dragging my sea containers to a different spot in my yard. Please tell me if it sounds too crazy. So, I have an M936A1 wrecker, and I have a few 20' sea containers which are gradually subsiding into the ground as the wee bunnies burrow underneath. I want them to be somewhere else, sitting level on some timbers or whatever, with rock underneath to discourage burrowing. I've ordered some widgets that hook onto the bottom corner castings at what we'll call the rear end, with spindles and hubs for 8-bolt rims. I plan to borrow a couple of wheels off one of my decrepit CUCVs, lift the rear end, put on a pair of wheels, and then drag the containers as if I was doing a lifted tow of a deadlined truck. At what we'll call the front end, I should be able to lift the container up with a chain sling and some container lifting lugs, but I still need a way to hook up the towbar. I have a couple of mil surplus clamp-on container couplers, so I designed an adapter to get machined out of steel. I'll need two of them. I 3D printed a prototype to check the fit before I try to have them made, because I bet they won't be cheap. Based on McMaster-Carr pricing, there's a hundred bucks worth of steel in each one before they even land on a milling machine table. What do y'all think?
And before anybody asks, my dog's name is Anise, and she's a very good girl.