I said on the "April is woodworking month" thread that I was going to clear off my workbench and my tablesaw and make some sawdust...
OK, I cleared off my workbench twice and my tablesaw 3 times and right now my tablesaw has a big pile of my hodge-podge collection of clamps on it.
I have about worn out Pinterest and Google Image search looking at clamp racks trying to find something that I feel will work for me. Part of my problem is that a large number of the racks pictured are loaded with about $1500 worth of clamps, apparently all bought at once in large matching sets.

I do have a few pairs but most of my clamps were acquired over 55 years, usually one at a time. I do have a motley batch of Pony pipe clamps and a half dozen or so that are not clamps yet. I'm removing some very nice black pipe gas lines that are no longer used. I just need to decide what lengths I want to cut them.
I've started hanging some C clamps and spring clamps from the ceiling joist above the bench but I really want most of my clamps on a mobile tower so I can move them to where I am working. That rules out a wall hung rack.
*****
The primary tablesaw is now in its hopefully permanent home. It's kind of cool there. Right now I can (by setting up a couple of support stands) cross-cut a 36' board in the center without moving anything. By pivoting the saw a few degrees counter-clockwise (on its wheels) I can rip a 25' board from end to end without moving anything else (just set up a couple of support stands).
*****
One quick and dirty wood item I need to make a few of are some special wood pallets. Not really like regular pallets that we are all used to. I do use those pallets a lot, usually moving them with forks on tractor 3 point hitches and can normally lift high enough like that to sit them on a flat deck trailer. I have also used forks on the front loader to go much higher. I can usually find those for free.
The ones I want to make are much smaller, usually about 18" x 28" or so and the support rails are normally about an inch high instead of the common 3 or 4 inches high. These are for use with 2 wheel hand trucks and are sized to fit through a common 32" door. I ran across them in use at a small factory and I find them quite handy for smallish batches of heavy stuff. Right now I have one under 3 bags of concrete mix in the farm shop and another under a batch of tractor parts. The two I have are just flat but I also want to make some that are a shallow box, perhaps a box with a higher back on the hand truck side. You can Google:
Mini pallet hand truck
to see more of the concept. I find it very valuable on the horse operation and in the shops.
*****
My next project needs to be a big rotating wheel with a spiral design that will hypnotically make horse clients want to pay their bill...
.