Finished custom rock tumbler with PVC barrel installed in a 2020 aluminum extrusion frame.

Project

Custom Rock Tumbler

Build Date:

After the Harbor Freight rock tumbler quit, I built a heavier-duty version around a 2020 aluminum extrusion frame and a larger Dayton motor. The goal was not to make anything flashy; it was to make a shop-built tumbler that could run a larger PVC barrel at a good tumble rate.

The finished setup uses metal-rod rollers, a pulley arrangement to tune drum speed, and custom PVC barrels. One end of each barrel is cemented shut, the other has a removable cap, and an internal strip of PVC runs along the length of the barrel so the rocks lift and tumble instead of sliding around the inside.

Problem and Barrel Parts

The failed small tumbler set the direction for the rebuild. The new barrel was made from PVC pipe and caps, with the removable end kept accessible for loading, rinsing, and checking progress.

Harbor Freight rock tumbler sitting beside a larger Dayton motor before the custom rock tumbler build.
Failed tumbler next to the Dayton motor.
PVC pipe, caps, cement, and a removable lid laid out before making the custom rock tumbler barrel.
PVC parts laid out for the barrel.
Custom PVC rock tumbler barrel assembled with a removable cap on one end.
Barrel assembled with a removable cap.

Frame and Drive

The frame came together from 2020 aluminum extrusion, with the Dayton motor mounted low and the roller rods supported by bearing blocks. The pulleys handle the practical part of the design: getting the barrel speed into a useful range.

Bearing block and metal rod staged for the custom rock tumbler roller assembly.
Bearing and metal rod for the rollers.
2020 aluminum extrusion frame with Dayton motor, rollers, and pulley hardware during assembly.
Frame, motor, and rollers coming together.
Metal roller rods and pulley drive components mounted in the custom rock tumbler frame.
Rollers and pulleys set up for speed.
Close detail of the belt and pulley path on the custom rock tumbler roller end.
Belt path checked at the roller end.

Barrel Detail

The important detail is inside the barrel. The strip along the long axis works like a lifter, helping the rocks roll over themselves rather than just riding around the smooth PVC wall.

Inside of a PVC rock tumbler barrel showing a PVC strip cemented along the long axis.
Internal PVC strip cemented in place.
Finished custom rock tumbler with PVC barrel installed in a 2020 aluminum extrusion frame.
Finished tumbler with the PVC barrel installed.

Finished Result

Once the frame, roller spacing, belt path, and barrel details were working together, the custom tumbler could go back to the original job: turning rough yard rocks into something worth checking after each cycle.

Rocks laid out on concrete before going into the custom rock tumbler.
First rock batch staged for tumbling.
Rocks rinsed in a blue basket after a cycle in the custom rock tumbler.
Rocks rinsed after a tumble cycle.
Polished rock held up after running through the custom rock tumbler.
Polish check after the custom build.

The main lesson was that the barrel design mattered as much as the motor upgrade. The bigger motor and sturdier frame made the tumbler feel more capable, but the internal PVC strip is what made the rocks actually tumble.

Resources:

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