- Joined
- Nov 23, 2019
- Messages
- 472
- Reaction score
- 724
First some pictures:
Kinda purty, yes?
Yes, it is. But a nightmare.
The person who sold this to me used to make wine with his dad. Passed on a few years back. But before he did he "re-habbed" his press into a decorative piece. All of the metal surfaces, including the cast iron head, were prepped(?) and painted with something unknown, probably from a rattle can. When I pulled the cotter pins the paint immediately flaked off. The staves are new maple and stained with who knows what. Probably Min Wax oil stain.
It has good bones. I suppose I could strip everything and run the staves through at planer. Buy some stainless steel bolts and nuts to replace the steel that exists.
Winemaking is enough work and I have enough projects that I didn't want to add this one. But we needed a larger press last year and we don't want to do as many presses as we did then. So I bought it.
The press was disassembled to component parts and dropped off to be sandblasted. It is currently in the queue to be powder coated with food safe material. When the parts are back I'll post them in this thread.
While considering new staves and the four hours in the wood shop plus the assembly (a hundred and five bolts, washers, and nuts), I started to wonder. Why not replace the wood with perforated stainless sheet. But that brings up more questions. What gauge should the stainless be? What would an ideal open ratio of holes to sheet? Where to source the material? Should it be run through a roll former? One advantage to this is that it would increase the capacity of the basket.
And of course, I'd have to address the rounds for the increased diameter. Maybe some thick plastic cutting boards to take up the margin?
Questions, questions.
Kinda purty, yes?
Yes, it is. But a nightmare.
The person who sold this to me used to make wine with his dad. Passed on a few years back. But before he did he "re-habbed" his press into a decorative piece. All of the metal surfaces, including the cast iron head, were prepped(?) and painted with something unknown, probably from a rattle can. When I pulled the cotter pins the paint immediately flaked off. The staves are new maple and stained with who knows what. Probably Min Wax oil stain.
It has good bones. I suppose I could strip everything and run the staves through at planer. Buy some stainless steel bolts and nuts to replace the steel that exists.
Winemaking is enough work and I have enough projects that I didn't want to add this one. But we needed a larger press last year and we don't want to do as many presses as we did then. So I bought it.
The press was disassembled to component parts and dropped off to be sandblasted. It is currently in the queue to be powder coated with food safe material. When the parts are back I'll post them in this thread.
While considering new staves and the four hours in the wood shop plus the assembly (a hundred and five bolts, washers, and nuts), I started to wonder. Why not replace the wood with perforated stainless sheet. But that brings up more questions. What gauge should the stainless be? What would an ideal open ratio of holes to sheet? Where to source the material? Should it be run through a roll former? One advantage to this is that it would increase the capacity of the basket.
And of course, I'd have to address the rounds for the increased diameter. Maybe some thick plastic cutting boards to take up the margin?
Questions, questions.