A Rifle Tree - DONE!
Posted: Tue Jun 18, 2019 10:08 am
Boy, oh, boy, it seems like I've been working on this a long time. Several mid-course corrections, the biggest of which involved having to discard the top-plate, which was too large (relative to the diameter of the base) to give me enough "tilt,"' while still accommodating the scoped rifles.
There's a pic of the defunct top piece, along with scraps of the leather I used to cover the base (rough side up - nice skid resistance!) and for the retention straps on the top (smooth side out, hand-beveled for grins). Used a "rustic" black nail and some velcro to secure the straps to the top plate, which was a disc of "live edge" wood I found at Michaels (go figure).
The outer edge of the base was some flexible/PVC quarter-round I found on Amazon, which led to me painting the visible parts of the base. Same paint on the center post. The big "nob" on the top is an end-piece from a curtain rod set I didn't need (and pack-ratted away), so that came in handy.
The rifles need to go in a very specific pattern to accommodate the scopes, so I made up some Sharpie/Duct Tape labels, just to keep things straight.
The 18" diameter base met my criteria for a small footprint, but a 24" base would have made things much simpler and less crowded.
All in all, I'm okay with the way it turned out. Lots of seat-of-the-pants engineering and re-jiggering, but the first one is always a live experiment with projects like these. Not in a hurry to make another one, but at least I have some of the stuff and could probably do it in half the time. Not likely, at least for the foreseeable future.
Kinda hard to call it "woodworking" isn't it? More like "multi-media"!
[P.S.: I took all these pictures in upright/portrait orientation, so that's how they appear in my photo files; why they loaded sideways here I can't figure out. If someone knows how to re-orient them, have at it. Sorry about that!).
There's a pic of the defunct top piece, along with scraps of the leather I used to cover the base (rough side up - nice skid resistance!) and for the retention straps on the top (smooth side out, hand-beveled for grins). Used a "rustic" black nail and some velcro to secure the straps to the top plate, which was a disc of "live edge" wood I found at Michaels (go figure).
The outer edge of the base was some flexible/PVC quarter-round I found on Amazon, which led to me painting the visible parts of the base. Same paint on the center post. The big "nob" on the top is an end-piece from a curtain rod set I didn't need (and pack-ratted away), so that came in handy.
The rifles need to go in a very specific pattern to accommodate the scopes, so I made up some Sharpie/Duct Tape labels, just to keep things straight.
The 18" diameter base met my criteria for a small footprint, but a 24" base would have made things much simpler and less crowded.
All in all, I'm okay with the way it turned out. Lots of seat-of-the-pants engineering and re-jiggering, but the first one is always a live experiment with projects like these. Not in a hurry to make another one, but at least I have some of the stuff and could probably do it in half the time. Not likely, at least for the foreseeable future.
Kinda hard to call it "woodworking" isn't it? More like "multi-media"!
[P.S.: I took all these pictures in upright/portrait orientation, so that's how they appear in my photo files; why they loaded sideways here I can't figure out. If someone knows how to re-orient them, have at it. Sorry about that!).