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Big table top! |
Posted by: iublue - 04-14-2024, 09:58 PM - Forum: Woodworking
- Replies (7)
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I am finishing up what I consider an odd sized table. It is 5' x 5' out of 1 3/8" thick walnut. Heavy top, so heavy that since I work by myself, I had to design a apparatus to move and flip the top over.
The schrinkulator calculates an 1" of movement if I put in the high value of 12% and the low value of 6". I would think that would be the extremes or at least I hope so!
I was going to use figure eights to fasten the top to the apron but I am concern that figure eights would not handle that much possible movement. Thoughts?
The base is 35" x 35" with 5" x 5" legs and 2" x 5" aprons. I was only going to put the figure eights parallel to the grain. Would it be a mistake not the attach the sides of the table to the base in some way? Once again, there is a potential of a considerable amount of movement.
Thoughts?
Thanks,
Toney
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Repairing damaged finish |
Posted by: goaliedad - 04-14-2024, 07:41 PM - Forum: Finishing
- Replies (2)
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My cousin’s daughter used “Amish wood milk” to clean an antique oak coffee table.
The stuff turned the wood gray. A quick google says Wiid Milk is vegetable oil and vinegar. Another Google tells me distilled vinegar will stain oak gray.
I suspect the table did not have a substantial finish, allowing the vinegar to react with the wood.
So….. how to restore the typical antique look to the table?
I am thinking oxialic acid to reduce the gray, then golden oak stain and some sort of top coat. Arm-R-Seal?
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Edge planing technique issue |
Posted by: Joe Doyle - 04-14-2024, 05:27 PM - Forum: Woodworking Hand Tools
- Replies (8)
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Hey there all. I am building a side table that Richard at The English Woodworker does in a video series. I am really enjoying the build with my daughter (it is her final project for a class that she has in called "Forgotten Crafts". She had the choice of another accounting or statistics class, or a humanities class where she has learned to tap maple trees for sap to make syrup, baking, ax sharpening, knitting, and some basic woodworking. Her professor said that for such an ambitious final project, she can accept help from anyone willing to give it to her.)
Anyway, when I am planing the edge of a board (these boards for this table are all either 3/4" or 7/8" on edge), I seem to always plane a slope into the edge the slopes down towards me. I am using either a No. 5 or 7 plane for this, with no camber on either of the blades. I place the plane dead center on the edge, and plane away. I am getting full width shavings, but after a few passes I can see that I am higher on the back side of the edge than the front side. I am able to correct this by offsetting the plane towards the high side, and bringing that side down to meet the front edge, but there has to be something that I am doing wrong that I would like to figure out and correct.
So, any idea what I am doing wrong and how I can fix it? I am 100% self taught on this stuff, with YouTube, forum posts, and a few books serving as my instructors.
Any and all input is greatly appreciated.
Thanks.
Joe
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WTB: Accessories for Dewalt 925 RAS |
Posted by: jteneyck - 04-11-2024, 02:37 PM - Forum: Tool Swap N' Sell
- Replies (2)
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Several accessories were made for the Dewalt 925 RAS. There was a molding head guard, for sure. The right end of the motor arbor is threaded, and I suspect there must have been a chuck that fit onto it for drills and/or router bits. Perhaps there were more, as well. If anyone has any accessories, or knows someone who does, I'm interested in buying them. Thanks.
John
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Simple Machine Improvements |
Posted by: jteneyck - 04-10-2024, 09:30 PM - Forum: Woodworking Power Tools
- Replies (8)
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I love my Grizzly G06363X bandsaw, except for the throat plate. It's probably fine for most cutting needs, but with very narrow parts, like sawing veneer, the work can get pulled down through the opening in the plate. I have no clue how they thought this was a good design.
So today I made a new insert from a piece of 1/2" Baltic birch. The recess the factory insert sits in is only 4.5 mm deep, so I cut a rabatt on the bottom so the top of the new insert is flush with the table. This stuff is really simple if you happen to have a CNC. Here's what the simulation showed it would look like.
And after a couple of minutes on the machine I had this. My measurements were good so the piece fit snugly w/o any adjustments needed. I made a couple more and gave one to my friend who has the same saw.
On to my miter saw, I made a new ZCI for it, too. This was a little more involved, but still easy to do with the CNC. I used a piece of hardwood planed to the correct thickness and then cut it out. Unlike the thin factory inserts, it stays flat and can be made perfectly flush with the top of the table.
On a roll, I made a large angle gauge with common angles to check the set up on my radial arm saw. 45 degrees:
60 degrees:
You get the idea. And the cutout from the middle works nicely on my miter saw.
I could have made these things by hand, and used to, but the CNC makes it easier to do so with almost guaranteed precision and accuracy. It's been a great addition to my shop.
John
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