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Bike rack built from the ground up

CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 7 years, 3 months AGO
by CHERYL SCHWEIZER
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | December 19, 2018 2:00 AM

MOSES LAKE — A commissioned project follows a certain sequence, and the first step is for the builder to consult the client.

The customer was the Washington Trust branch in Moses Lake. “It was a bike rack for – George? George, I believe,” said Enoch Figueroa, Moses Lake. It was in fact commissioned for George Elementary, and “they wanted a fish,” said Jacob Joslin, Royal City. “And we took it from there.” Enoch and Jacob are students at Columbia Basin Technical Skills Center, in its advanced manufacturing program.

Washington Trust employees work on charitable projects, with different branches choosing their own. For 2017 the Moses Lake branch chose to help George Elementary. The final project from that initiative was the bike rack.

“So many kids in George ride bikes,” said Washington Trust manager Shelly Detrick. “We decided they needed a bike rack.”

Jacob and Enoch looked at bike racks online for inspiration, then came up with a design of their own. “They gave us a couple options and we loved the fish,” Detrick said.

Ckathleen Seanna also worked on the project. Instructor Dave Oliver let the skills center students take the lead. “They tig-welded the whole thing,” Oliver said.

“We made a template, kind of lined it out on the floor,” Jacob said. But the design was the easy part.

Fish are not, of course, square. And a fish-shaped bike rack isn't square – in fact, there's not one straight line or 90-degree angle in the whole bike rack.

“We started putting it together piece by piece from the base,” Jacob said. It required welding a lot of really weird angles, while working in some tight spaces. “You have to go inside the fish, and you have to taper (the body),” Enoch said. “As you go down the thing it (the space for welding) gets smaller and smaller.”

And everything had to fit, even if it didn't quite fit. “If it doesn't line up exactly right, you've got to make it work,” Jacob said. It was a tricky job. “Definitely,” Enoch said.

Welding requires handling the pieces that are being welded (in this case at weird angles), the binding material and the torch, sometimes while lying down. “You've got to do a lot of things at once,” Jacob said.

Oliver supervised, of course, and made one revision. “Dave said, 'it's missing something,'” Enoch said, and at his suggestion they added the fish's eye. That required use of the skills center's water jet cutter and a ball bearing.

“It turned out well,' Enoch said.

Oliver said the project required the real-life application of classroom lessons. Taking the project from a drawing on the shop floor to a finished product “is huge,” he said.

The bike rack was sent out for its green-and-purple paint job, donated by Robert Bailey of R&D Powder Coating.

“I like that spirit of collaboration,” Detrick said. “The beauty of it was students helping students.”

Jacob is a senior at Royal High School; after graduation he plans to attend Community Colleges of Spokane, with the goal of becoming a lineman. Enoch is a junior at Moses Lake High School. After graduation he plans on college, and “I'm going to get as many welding certifications as I can,” with the goal of making a career in the field.

Cheryl Schweizer can be reached via email at [email protected].

Editor's note: The print version of this story misidentified the bank that commissioned the project. This online article has been corrected to reflect the correct name. The Herald regrets the error.

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