My buddy and I decided to take these ammo can saddle bags to the next level by consuming copious amounts of whiskey and making them a little flashier, but still keep that "Holy crap, are those saddle bags ammo cans?" feel. They came out much cooler than I think either of us suspected they would.
Materials:
2 Ammo Cans
Some scrap sheet metal (steel or aluminum, something with a decent compression strength)
Grinder wheels (cut off, grinding and stripping)
Liquid paint stripper
Nuts & Bolts
Acrylic or Rust proofing spray
Tools:
Drill/Drill Press
Angle/Bench Grinder
Wrenches
Welder (optional)
These were inspired by another Instructable that can be found at http://www.instructables.com/id/Motorcycle-Saddlebags-from-Ammunition-Cases/
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Army surplus stores sell them if you don't have a couple already. 40mm cans were chosen for this build. Note that 40mm ammo cans in particular have diagonal side rails to add extra rigidity to the box. This was a blessing and a curse for this build. The brackets we fabricated had to be made in such a way as to not infringe on the rail too much, and part of the rail on on one box had to be angle grinded away before it could be mounted flush with the motorcycle. That being said though, the amount of rigidity these rails give the box is significant and will make the box stronger and allow for far less vibration than a box without the side rail. We mounted these on my buddies 650cc Yamaha V-Star.










































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Thanks!
So we put the bubble level on the mounting plate attached to the bike, then raised the low end of the level until it was, level. Then we measured to find the angle difference off of level. Once we new the angle off of level we were able to take the bracket back off, place it on the can using that angle to mark for holes on the box through the existing holes on the bracket.
I hope that all makes sense. The other options we considered were making one of the box holes more of a slot about an inch long so the box could be adjusted as it was being mounted. If our angle system didn't get the boxes perfectly level and even with each other this is how we would have made the correction, but we didn't want to start with that because we wanted to maintain as much structural integrity as possible. Another consideration was short pieces of cotton wick placed in the bolt holes on the bike with a bit of paint on the end so the box could be held up evenly to the bike and pressed against that to make marks... but we weren't sure how accurate that could really be. Good luck, post pictures if you do it.
Detachable brackets let you use them as stools when you hit the campsite.
Great result as well.
I think chroming is the way to go.
http://www.worldofstock.com/slides/TRO1700.jpg. Strong work, Panda.
If i remember correctly from being on "ammo detail" they were powder coated.