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Square holes in square tubing

10K views 16 replies 11 participants last post by  Merrywelder  
#1 ·
Anyone have an idea(s) on how to put square holes in 1"x1" x 15 gauge tubing? I've done the drill round holes insert square picket and weld. I'm hoping someone has a suggestion that will make a cleaner connection.

I'm not going to purchase a press that will punch square holes, that is not in the budget. It would be the ideal way to accomplish what I want, but it is price prohibitive.

Any ideas? Places to look at someone elses invention?
 
#4 ·
I am building gates with ½"x½" pickets. The machining is not an option. I have nothing except a drill press. Maybe there is a way to use the drill press to do this? A high dollar piece of equipment is not worth the cost to build these gates. I'm looking for something low cost but efficient to punch, drill, slot square holes in one side of the 1"x1" tubing. The hole doesn't need to go through the tube. I'm hoping that someone out there has a home built machine or a "I did it this way" story. I like the build it yourself better than look what I bought.
 
#6 ·
Just an idea. Never tried it myself though. Might be worth trying on a scrap piece with a couple of holes.

Drill 1/2" holes. Make a 4 sided, tapered punch out of some 1/2" bar steel. Put it in the drilled hole. Taper the sides of the punch so when it bottoms on the backside of the 1" tube (after you smack it with a hammer) the resultant round hole has been 'formed' to a 1/2" square hole.
Put the bar you are punching the holes in on a steel plate so it doesn't deform the backside when the punch bottoms. Or maybe weld a stop on the punch so it won't actually touch the bottom of the tube you are punching the square holes in.

If the above makes sense you should only be 'forming' the 4 square corners of each hole since the 1/2" drilled hole took most of the metal out to start with.
 
#8 ·
Sticky, that's what I'm doing now. I cut the pickets to fit inside the frame and weld. I dislike the weld. I was hoping to eliminate the weld on the picket, or at least the exposed weld. Square holes allow the picket to enter the tubing and be captured when the frame is welded.

There is a punch on the market that will do this job...$7000.00 for press and dies.
 
#10 ·
Drill your holes the same diameter as the width of your pickets (I would assume they are square) place a piece of steel inside the tubing as a back plate. Now heat up your holes and drive a dummy picket through the round hole. You will get a little distortion, but better than nothing.

If it were me, I would just make up a template for my flame cutter and through the plasma torch on the pantograph. (But here again, I have plasma, and an almost finished flame cutting table.

Jonathan

Hope this helps
 
#11 ·
Stever sounds like your haveing quite a time with this, ive seen some good ideas so far. when I do a square tubing fince (in the field) where I dont have my mig for good clean unnoticeable welds I use a 7014 rod. Yes the weld is still visable but 7014 leaves a nice flat mig style weld on the picket. I dont know if the look of the weld is the problem your trying to get rid of, if thats whats realy bothering ya. But if you dont come to a good time worthy solution to machining that square hole without takeing out a second morgae maybe the 7014 will give you the clean look you need:blob2: :blob2:


On a second note if you must have those square holes in your pickets you might look into subing out the holes to a local machine shop. They will have the punches to do it and the cost should be less than you haveing to equip your shop to do it.:cool2:
 
#13 ·
Now that I've read these posts and had time to think about it, the punched channel on the bottom would allow for welding the pickets from the bottom and keep water from collecting. The top tube could be drilled. The top tube only needs to hold the pickets. Thanks guys. Now if I can find that pre-drilled channel.
 
#15 ·
How about solid bar that is a tight fit inside tube. Weld bar to railing, grind down excess weld, Push tube on bar, with holes drilled on two sides of tube about 2 or 3 inches from end. Once pushed home, plug weld the bar to the tubing, and fill the holes shut. Finish off with flap disk, a shot of Rustolem, and you'll never be able to find where there ever was a weld. You might drill through the railing, and end weld those solid bars, then flap off the same