Needed something better than $34.95 Amazon picnic table to shoot off. Grabbed a few things I had laying around and came up with something easy and very stable. Far exceeded my expectations..
The sandbags are are Mathews 15 lb ones which are used to stabilize light stands in photo studios: pn 299550, $26 from Adorama in NYC and lots other places. Free delivery- at least when I ordered them 2 years ago. The sawhorse is available at Home Depot: pn TBC550, $30. The deck is ¾" Birch ply 40" X 24" with 8 X 17" notch - 60 degrees cut. Flip over for RH shooters. Used jigsaw with straight edge to guide. The sawhorses already have two holes at each end ideally located- #8 X ¾" wood screws with thick Teco steel 3/16" flat washers. Obviously, sawhorse is run diagonally: I balanced the deck before connecting- then marked outline underneath with pencil. Leaves floor space for the shooting stool legs.
One of the main reasons this table works so well is that these new style, inexpensive sawhorses are truly excellent- especially for the price. Can't believe how cheap they are for the quality. The typical stiff rubber sawhorses that I already had laying around were immediately VERY obsolete when I bought one of these. VERY rigid when deployed. And the sandbags really lock it down. Though, not actually sure I needed the sand bags- seemed to work real good without them as well.
Add carrying handle cutout, carpet, and edges to taste......
The sandbags are are Mathews 15 lb ones which are used to stabilize light stands in photo studios: pn 299550, $26 from Adorama in NYC and lots other places. Free delivery- at least when I ordered them 2 years ago. The sawhorse is available at Home Depot: pn TBC550, $30. The deck is ¾" Birch ply 40" X 24" with 8 X 17" notch - 60 degrees cut. Flip over for RH shooters. Used jigsaw with straight edge to guide. The sawhorses already have two holes at each end ideally located- #8 X ¾" wood screws with thick Teco steel 3/16" flat washers. Obviously, sawhorse is run diagonally: I balanced the deck before connecting- then marked outline underneath with pencil. Leaves floor space for the shooting stool legs.
One of the main reasons this table works so well is that these new style, inexpensive sawhorses are truly excellent- especially for the price. Can't believe how cheap they are for the quality. The typical stiff rubber sawhorses that I already had laying around were immediately VERY obsolete when I bought one of these. VERY rigid when deployed. And the sandbags really lock it down. Though, not actually sure I needed the sand bags- seemed to work real good without them as well.
Add carrying handle cutout, carpet, and edges to taste......
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