The bead roller is meant to be fastened to a vise. The problem in my case is that the vise is fastened to a wall mounted table so it was limiting how one could use the roller, either the handle was touching the table or the piece being worked on was to big causing it to hit the wall.
The plan was to make a simple stand for it. Mostly out of left over scrap iron I had laying around.
Preparing for paint.
As the optimist I am everything was welded and painted before mounting the bead roller on the stand....
I deliberately made the stand quite high so that I would not have to bend over so much when working with the roller. It is important to see where the roll is touching the piece being worked on especially if one needs to make several passes over the same place. If you miss your last pass it leaves traces on the metal.
As the stands main vertical beam is of an L profile and the roller is quite heavy the rolling support was really lousy. The hole thing was "wobbling" so bad it felt un usable. Tried to show this in the video.
There was enough L bar left so I welded that to the stand making the vertical profile square.
Remounted and repainted. Now it feels study enough.
You tube has several videos of how to improve these kind of bead rollers and in the future I would also like to apply at least a couple of the mods shown there.
There are two main issues.
One is the stiffness of the body of the bead roller, the upper and lower roll have a tendency to move in horizontal direction away from each other if much pressure is applied on the rolls. Most common fix for this seems to be to weld square profile tubing on the back side of the roller stiffening the construction. For the beads I have made so far I don't feel this has been a big issue but every time one uses the roller the lack of stiffness is noticeable.
The second issue and in my view the more severe issue is the hand crank. It is difficult to use the bead roller alone with the crank. Manual even says one should not use it alone. Best would of course be to motorize it and have a foot pedal for changing direction of rotation. But I believe a hand wheel would also be a big improvement compared to the crank. Usually it goes fine until the crank is the furthest away from you then it is almost impossible to both see what you are doing and crank at the same time. With a hand wheel this would be improved.