Put down some of those horse mats years ago, after cutting them to size. They certainly aren't any fun to move, but I have to say they work great, easy to clean, and I and the next guy who has them will be long dead before they wear out. Mike
I've seen holes worn through several of them, by our stallions. I was surprised to find that a jig saw or bandsaw does reasonably well cutting them, haven't tried a circular saw.Put down some of those horse mats years ago, after cutting them to size. They certainly aren't any fun to move, but I have to say they work great, easy to clean, and I and the next guy who has them will be long dead before they wear out. Mike
What a great idea... I need to make these as well and you just made it a heck of a lot easier to mark them! Thank you.cross posted in hints and tips
used a small combo square to mark a saddle for my new Bison. I wasn't happy with the rough layout I put on with black.
So redid in red with this method. much more room to mark it accurately.
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Didn't watch the video, but from the still image, it looks tippy to me. I'd hate to have a wheel catch on something and tip over, dumping chucks on concrete.
I am so limited on space that I think I can make the idea work.... Actually I have a spot this could live without moving it around...Didn't watch the video, but from the still image, it looks tippy to me. I'd hate to have a wheel catch on something and tip over, dumping chucks on concrete.
I just watched the end of that, I am surprised it is not tippy. I wonder if you grab the 3 jaw off of it, if it's top heavy. I would probably put the 4 jaw on the bottom, since the 3 jaw is the most used, so the 4 jaw keeps the weight low.