Introduction: Belt Buckle From Trail Marker
The first step to doing this project is to find an item that can be used as a belt buckle. I used a trail marker but anything can be used as a substitute, it it limited by your own imagination only.
Step 1: Making the Back
In order to make the buckle solid, a back will need to be cut. I used a plasma cutter to cut out a circle and then rounded it out with a grinder. Then, I drilled holes in the sheet metal and used rivets to connect the marker to the metal disk. The rivets were needed because the trail marker was too thin to weld, and just would have melted before the sheet metal even had a chance to heat up. After the trail marker was riveted to the backing of sheet metal, I ground it flush and sandblasted the whole thing. (Wire Wheeling is a formidable substitute, but sandblasting is easier and has a slightly different effect.)
Step 2: Adding the Buckle
For this step 3 pieces will be needed.
1) A ring to slip the belt through (Made of 1/8 inch round steel)
2) A piece of metal for the ring to go through
3) A piece to hold the belt through the holes (Also made of 1/8 inch rounded steel
Check the pictures out before continuing to get an initial visual. The first thing i did was shaped the rectangular ring. Try to make it as rectangular as possible, without round edges. I took a piece of 1/8 inch round steel and bent it into that shape, and then tig welded it so it would stay in that shape. I left the end long before i cut it because i wanted to save it and not lose it for the end pin in the final picture. Then, i used that rectangular ring to shape my steel to the size I want it. I made it bump up so the ring could slip under and then it had a free range of motion, and then i welded it down (That one is pretty sloppy but it works well). Lastly, cut down the piece at the end so it can be used as a pin to slip the belt through. After that is done, the buckle is just about done.
Step 3: Finishing the Buckle
The last steps are crucial so the buckle looks nice and does not rust. First, I sandblasted it to clean the welds a bit, and get rid of the discoloration. After it was thoroughly sandblasted again, I used polyurethane on it, and many thick layers so it looks smooth and glazed over. That's all; thanks for reading!
7 Comments
8 years ago
Haha Gartholameau, not quite. It was found on the floor all scratched up
8 years ago on Introduction
So...you didn't leave people wandering around trying to find the trail??? :-)
8 years ago
Time*
8 years ago
I have access to a tig. Mig. And Smaw Machines. I will say a mig weld would have been better. A very large series of tack welds will weld sheet metal together. I do that all the te when building with sheet metal
8 years ago
Those look like stick welds. Am I right?
Reply 8 years ago
No. They are tig welds. They are a pretty sloppy and I sandblasted them, so both of those things make it look different. I just tried to melt it really well so it stayed together, and the welds grew large like stick welds. A stick welder could work too though if that's what you have.
8 years ago on Introduction
This is cool! I love belt buckels of all shapes and sizes!