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Actual Woodworking ;~)

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Leon

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Jul 19, 2015, 2:39:53 PM7/19/15
to
It has been several months since I have built anything large, October
last year I think. Anyway my wife wants more storage in her quilting
studio and I designed a couple of two piece cabinets that will be
painted to match all of her other studio furniture. As usual I am using
my front and back face frame methods of building the cabinets with all
mortise and floating tenon jointery and dado and grove jointery, and
some lap joints on the back frame.

Anyway about 18 floating tenons, and 11 dado/groves. Nothing but wood
and glue so far for this particular cabinet. Three to go with two of
them being taller with glass doors.

A test dry fit to make sure all of this fits as planned.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/19826609092/in/photostream

Glued and in the clamps.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/19211335554/in/photostream/

Where this will eventually end up.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/19827145132/in/dateposted-public/

The color will be mint green but I use different colors to distinguish
different materials so that when I import from Sketchup to Cutlist Plus
I don't have to identify the material again for each piece.

Comments?

Ed Pawlowski

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Jul 19, 2015, 4:25:31 PM7/19/15
to
On 7/19/2015 2:39 PM, Leon wrote:
> It has been several months since I have built anything large, October
> last year I think. Anyway my wife wants more storage in her quilting
> studio and I designed a couple of two piece cabinets that will be
> painted to match all of her other studio furniture.

> Comments?

Are you sure you are posting this to the proper group? It as nothing to
do with politics or the price of gas.

I like the idea of them. We're going to be moving my wife's sewing room
and she wants one wall to be display cabinets. I'll have to study your
design to see if I can steal your ideas.

Leon

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Jul 19, 2015, 5:56:37 PM7/19/15
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If you use Sketchup I could send you the file.


Sonny

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Jul 19, 2015, 10:27:08 PM7/19/15
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On Sunday, July 19, 2015 at 1:39:53 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
> As usual I am using
> my front and back face frame methods of building the cabinets with all
> mortise and floating tenon jointery and dado and grove jointery, and
> some lap joints on the back frame.
>
> Anyway about 18 floating tenons,....

Time and again, I've paid attention to many of you all's use of floating tenons, though I may not have commented. I don't recall using floating tenons in the past, but I have lately, and I've seen or understood how well they perform by you're and others working, explanations and results.

Lately, I tried hand cutting mortises, for loose tenons, in the walnut trestle tabel top. Did okay, but I'm sure a jig and plunge router would have done a better job, making for the top's edges to be a better aligned (even), than with my hand job. In essence, I am not totally pleased with my hand cut mortises, despite their being fairly good.

I don't have a plunge router. I suppose a plunge router (and jig) is much more convenient/efficient, than using a standard router, for cutting these mortises. Kinna like a few years ago, I finally bought a biscuit jointer and found it easy to use and using biscuits, to be much more convenient than the job of drilling and using dowels.

I suppose it'll be a while before I make any more mortises for floating tenons, and I may invest in a plunge router, then.

Your project reminds me, again, to think about getting a plunge router. I'm lacking the skill and experience to use one, also, as readily as I use my standard router.

As always, Leon, your projects are great, in more ways than one.

Sonny

J. Clarke

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Jul 20, 2015, 4:05:45 AM7/20/15
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In article <7dec3c09-bd0b-4160...@googlegroups.com>,
cedar...@aol.com says...
Might want to consider building a router table and putting a router lift
in it. Gives you very, very precise control--with a good lift and a
good fence you can position to 1/128 of an inch or better. You can DIY
the lift if you want to, there's a brief discussion at
<http://lumberjocks.com/topics/44093> that lists most of the available
lift plans.


Leon

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Jul 20, 2015, 10:32:15 AM7/20/15
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Thank you Sonny.

I know a lot of people say that you can't blame your tools if your
project does not come out right. I say if you don't have the right
tools it takes way too long to prove the previous comment.

I can cut many of these type mortises as quickly as cutting a slot for a
biscuit and much more accurately with the right machine.

These would be difficult to cut accurately even with a plunge router.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/11051049986/in/dateposted-public/




John McCoy

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Jul 20, 2015, 2:40:45 PM7/20/15
to
Sonny <cedar...@aol.com> wrote in
news:7dec3c09-bd0b-4160...@googlegroups.com:

> Lately, I tried hand cutting mortises, for loose tenons, in the walnut
> trestle tabel top. Did okay, but I'm sure a jig and plunge router
> would have done a better job, making for the top's edges to be a
> better aligned (even), than with my hand job. In essence, I am not
> totally pleased with my hand cut mortises, despite their being fairly
> good.

I think this is why floating tenons is a "modern" technique.
If you're working by hand, it's much less effort to cut one
mortise and one tenon, than to cut two mortises and a longer
tenon piece.

John

Sonny

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Jul 21, 2015, 8:49:50 AM7/21/15
to
On Monday, July 20, 2015 at 1:40:45 PM UTC-5, John McCoy wrote:
> > Sonny
> > Lately, I tried hand cutting mortises, for loose tenons,


> I think this is why floating tenons is a "modern" technique.
> If you're working by hand, it's much less effort to cut one
> mortise and one tenon, than to cut two mortises and a longer
> tenon piece.
>
> John


Yeah, and in conjunction with what Leon said "that you can't blame your tools if your project does not come out right" and working "with the right machine."

Long explanation, here.
Other things involved in my thinking and with this table project (reminded by Leon's mortises and tenons, again), kinna brought all my issues/problems to the fore..... *Issues/problems with this particular table project.

I initially thought my table project was fairly straight forward... and it is, but subsequent (changing) circumstances didn't allow for my execution of the building processes, as simply as I had envisioned, because of those unforeseen, unanticipated changes.

I had/have no written plans, only a visual idea of the finished product. Then, I visualized-worked backwards, in my mental planning, as to each task to be done, in order to accomplish the end product. With each individual task, I did measure, calculate, mark, scribe, etc., but the general plans/schematics were in my head.

1) The table top boards: Rough cut 2" thick, 11'10" long, about 19" wide; air dried for 2 yrs before beginning work; After drying, they were planed to 1 3/8" to 1 1/2" thick. There was some slight variation in the planed thickness, along the length of each board, because of 1) the large size of the boards and ....

2) Despite the boards being stickered, well, when air dried, and, after having been planed and the mating edges jointed, there was still some slight warping/waviness (not bad) along their lenghts. I had thought the irregular surfaces could be corrected, at least to some extent, with the mortise & tenon applications.... the remainder of the correction being to sand the surfaces, along the mating edges, until even.... And, essentially, this has happened. However, there has been some unexpected other "influences" that has crept into the mix.

Unexpected "influences":
1) My initial "design idea", for the table top, was to keep each board separate from the other, i.e., not glued together, because each board is so large and heavy and each board will expand & contract(humidity/temp). Each table top board weighs about 75lbs, I'm guessing. It would be difficult to move that large of table top (the table disassembled), if the three boards were glued into one piece. So I decided to abandon the glued-up assembly and have the boards assembled separately. This separate assembly plan presented another issue, with respect to expansion/contraction movement.... there would be open "cracks" (separation) along the mating surfaces. This/these "opening" events will likely have to be corrected by, periodically, manually closing the mating joints, from time to time. I don't want to have to do this "manual closing".

2) The use of loose tenons came into play for the unglued top boards assembly..... sounds easy enough, problem solved! My hand cut mortises and tenons didn't completely solve the problem, as well as I assumed. The boards are still moving, i.e., expanding and contracting. Would better-cut mortises have helped the problem? Probably, but probably not completely. Should I have invested in a plunge router and jig, as I had thought, back then (months ago)? Back then, I had thought hand cut mortises would have been good enough, so I dismissed the new tool purchase.

For their 11'+ length, I have 7 tenons along each mating edge. Bottom-side view of the table, scroll right for second pic. The tenons are 1"W X 3/8"thick X 2"L.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/19875493982/in/photostream

I think my walnut table project is worth the effort to get the right tools for the job and/or have the correct skills to perform the tasks at hand.

Leon's cabinet project, again, made for my re-evaluating the things (tools) I need to seriously consider, when doing some projects. I am discovering that this table project is not as some of my past typical, run-of-the-mill "primitives". I need a better approach, better skills and/or appropriate tools, to accomplish what I want.

There have been a few other things, with this whole project, that has not gone as smoothly as I had envisioned. I blame the large size of the boards for some of the issues.... the slab leg units are still drying, moving/warping, a bit; the trestle board is still "moving", also. I ask myself, would having kiln dried the lumber made for more stable lumber? With this project, I am having to tweak my knowledge(or ignorance?) and skills, an in-progress job, in and of itself.

Sonny

Swingman

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Jul 21, 2015, 9:21:33 AM7/21/15
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On 7/19/2015 9:27 PM, Sonny wrote:

> In essence, I am not totally pleased with my hand cut mortises, despite their being fairly good.

And highly likely to be plenty sufficient to do the job.

Taking a look at xrays of M&T joints in antique furniture will disavow
you of the idea most old time woodworking was somehow the epitome of
precision when done by hand.

Sure, there are a few bespoke "master works" with precision joinery, but
most product of the old time woodworker wouldn't pass the muster of
today's imaginary magazine standards, which are driven by advertising
dollar, in pursuit of a perfection that rarely ever existed in practice.

--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://www.google.com/+eWoodShop
https://plus.google.com/+KarlCaillouet/posts
http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)

Leon

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Jul 21, 2015, 9:45:18 AM7/21/15
to
On 7/21/2015 8:21 AM, Swingman wrote:
> On 7/19/2015 9:27 PM, Sonny wrote:
>
>> In essence, I am not totally pleased with my hand cut mortises,
>> despite their being fairly good.
>
> And highly likely to be plenty sufficient to do the job.
>
> Taking a look at xrays of M&T joints in antique furniture will disavow
> you of the idea most old time woodworking was somehow the epitome of
> precision when done by hand.

Heck, put an x-ray to my mortises and you will see that one side of the
joint, usually the end of a board, has an exact fit Domino mortise and
the opposite mating side has an elongated Domino mortise, width wise, to
give me a touch of wiggle room during the glue up. Precise fit between
the mortise and floating tenon is not at all necessary in this regard.
It is helpful however if the distance from the reference surface is dead
on so that mating pieces outer surfaces share the same plane. ;~)

Sonny

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Jul 21, 2015, 10:38:51 AM7/21/15
to
On Tuesday, July 21, 2015 at 8:21:33 AM UTC-5, Swingman wrote:
> On 7/19/2015 9:27 PM, Sonny wrote:
>
> > In essence, I am not totally pleased with my hand cut mortises, despite their being fairly good.
>
> And highly likely to be plenty sufficient to do the job.

Actually, the mortises and tenons fit well, together.... tenons have a nice tight fit into the mortises. The mortise slots' alignments, from board to board, is perfect. I had expected these "fittings" to fix the subtle/slight warp (waviness-misalignment), of the boards surfaces, to be better corrected. It is the degree of the non-correcting, that I am not totally pleased with.

And thanks for the vote of confidence, that they are plenty sufficient.

Leon's comment:
> .... the opposite mating side has an elongated Domino mortise, width wise, to
give me a touch of wiggle room during the glue up.

At one time, I had thought to glue the table top boards together. Their size made me rethink that. For smaller boards, gluing is fine, but maybe not for these large of boards, planks.

I may reconsider gluing them. Another option, I had considered, was to install 4 or 5 dutchmans along each mating joint, on the underside of the tabletop. Not sure how well top-surface dutchmans would look, for secondary decor function. Wonder if 4 or 5 topside dutchmans would be overkill, look inappropriate for decor? Maybe 3 per joint topside and 2 per joint bottomside. Don't know if I can do justice to this project, with exposed dutchmans, as well as George Nakashima would do, but the more I think about it, the more appealing it is. I do pretty good dutchmans, also. There's one on the underside of one board, securing a check.

Sonny

Leon

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Jul 21, 2015, 11:32:11 AM7/21/15
to
You have heard Swingman and I say this at least once before. ;~)
In my very early years I started a project from a few measurements and a
picture in my mind. The projects came out well but took for eeeeeeever.
Then came the computer and CAD, my first computer was in 1986. I was
building serious furniture 8 years before that. I went through probably
5~7 different brands of CAD software including AutoCAD LT. All were an
immense help.

Then about 8~9 years ago Swingman and I tried Sketchup one more time. I
think both of us had tried earlier versions and removed them but the
last time we both saw improvements and have not looked back.
Adding simple to use 3D greatly improves the ability to see exactly how
a project will look in its finished form. Additionally you literally
build your drawing as you would your project in the shop, piece by piece
as components. so add dutch-mans in the drawing and see for yourself it
they will be too much. ;~)

Another thing I like to do for my customers is draw the room that the
piece of furniture will fit into so that they can see the scale to the
room shape and size.

The link below is to a pretty complex drawing. This drawing is our home
with my garage shop and all of the furniture that I have built, for our
home. I have on occasion changed the color of a piece after placing it
this model as the original color did not go well.
FWIW every thing you see that is placed in the house model can be
removed and edited. Basically all of the furniture can be moved,
rotated, disassembled and viewed in explicit detail exactly how it was
built.
In fact if you look at the top floor, my wife's quilting studio, you
will see again the model of the cabinet that I am currently building.

Sketchup is a free program and a priceless tool, not to mention a lot of
fun.

https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/19266171184/in/dateposted-public/





Bill

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Jul 21, 2015, 12:22:40 PM7/21/15
to
Leon wrote:
>
> Sketchup is a free program and a priceless tool, not to mention a lot
> of fun.
>
>

I learned the other day, it is still "a lot of fun" if you fall out of
practice with it! ;)
Maybe part of it was the new version seemed a little bit different that
the old. I recall
I used to be able to have a bunch of bottons on the *left*, but I
couldn't figure out how to
get them there. I am using a version I downloaded in 2015.

Bill

Leon

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Jul 21, 2015, 12:41:34 PM7/21/15
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LOL, is that question? IIRC 2015 is the latest.

Mike Marlow

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Jul 21, 2015, 1:07:38 PM7/21/15
to
Swingman wrote:

>
> Taking a look at xrays of M&T joints in antique furniture will disavow
> you of the idea most old time woodworking was somehow the epitome of
> precision when done by hand.
>
> Sure, there are a few bespoke "master works" with precision joinery,
> but most product of the old time woodworker wouldn't pass the muster
> of today's imaginary magazine standards, which are driven by
> advertising dollar, in pursuit of a perfection that rarely ever
> existed in practice.

Thank you Karl! With all of the talk here about precision to 1/128th of an
inch and all that, it is really noteworthy that those often admired artisans
of yore, never came even clost to that - nor did they need to. The evidence
of their precision remains standing today, as proof of what really matters.

--

-Mike-
mmarlo...@windstream.net


Leon

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Jul 21, 2015, 2:21:03 PM7/21/15
to
Well deep in mind Mike that the precision of hidden mortises and tenons
is not so important, and yes we are talking at least 64ths of an inch,
when it comes to what you actually see.

For instance if you are not cutting stock precisely the same length for
rails for door or face frames, way more accurate than 1/128", you see
gaps and cracks. Their lengths are not so important so much as their
lengths have to be dead nuts the same.

And then there was the last kitchen that Karl and I worked on where we
were dealing with measurements in the 64ths of an inch gap between
cabinet doors and drawers for the parts that you do see.

Basically you have to know and recognize when you have to be anally
accurate and when that is not so important. ;~)

https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/5921383107/in/dateposted-public/

Swingman

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Jul 21, 2015, 3:41:37 PM7/21/15
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John McCoy

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Jul 21, 2015, 4:25:47 PM7/21/15
to
Sonny <cedar...@aol.com> wrote in
news:e679516c-ec3d-4e9e...@googlegroups.com:

> I had/have no written plans, only a visual idea of the finished
> product. Then, I visualized-worked backwards, in my mental planning,
> as to each task to be done, in order to accomplish the end product.
> With each individual task, I did measure, calculate, mark, scribe,
> etc., but the general plans/schematics were in my head.

I'm always impressed by folk that can do that sort of thing
in their mind. I can't - I have to draw everything out on
a piece of paper, front, side, and top views, with dimensions.

> 1) The table top boards: Rough cut 2" thick, 11'10" long, about 19"
> wide; air dried for 2 yrs before beginning work; After drying, they
> were planed to 1 3/8" to 1 1/2" thick. There was some slight
> variation in the planed thickness, along the length of each board,
> because of 1) the large size of the boards and ....

Curious how you planed them. Do you have access to a monster
power planer, or a wide belt sander?

> This separate assembly plan presented
> another issue, with respect to expansion/contraction movement....
> there would be open "cracks" (separation) along the mating surfaces.
> This/these "opening" events will likely have to be corrected by,
> periodically, manually closing the mating joints, from time to time.
> I don't want to have to do this "manual closing".

Not sure I'm actually following this, but could you peg the
tenons from below, and keep the joints tight that way? Then
all the movement would be at the outer edge of the table.

John

Bill

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Jul 21, 2015, 5:30:34 PM7/21/15
to
Leon wrote:
>
>
> LOL, is that question? IIRC 2015 is the latest.
Yes, how do you get all of the standard buttons on the left hand side,
like before?
Is there an option I couldn't locate?

Bill

unread,
Jul 21, 2015, 5:36:46 PM7/21/15
to
Nevermind, I found it. It's called "Large Tool Set". It's easier to
find when you aren't trying to get something done.... ;) I've always
used Large Tool Set, so things were a little awkward not using it.

Bill

Swingman

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Jul 21, 2015, 5:47:06 PM7/21/15
to
Try opening the "large toolbar set" and simply drag it to the left side

Swingman

unread,
Jul 21, 2015, 5:48:21 PM7/21/15
to
On 7/21/2015 4:46 PM, Swingman wrote:
> On 7/21/2015 4:29 PM, Bill wrote:

>> Yes, how do you get all of the standard buttons on the left hand side,
>> like before?
>> Is there an option I couldn't locate?
>
> Try opening the "large toolbar set" and simply drag it to the left side

Took a call and by the time I hit send you'd found it ...

Dan Coby

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Jul 21, 2015, 5:51:52 PM7/21/15
to
Obviously you have found the View/Toolbar menu.

You can also move toolbars around. There is a thin dotted line at either
the left or the top of a tool set. If you place the the cursor over the
thin dotted line you will see a four arrow symbol like the one shown
with the move tool. Hold the cursor down and you can then move the tool
set. You can place tool sets almost anywhere. I.e. at the top, left,
right, bottom or floating around.


Dan

Bill

unread,
Jul 21, 2015, 6:17:30 PM7/21/15
to
Swingman wrote:
> On 7/21/2015 4:46 PM, Swingman wrote:
>> On 7/21/2015 4:29 PM, Bill wrote:
>
>>> Yes, how do you get all of the standard buttons on the left hand side,
>>> like before?
>>> Is there an option I couldn't locate?
>>
>> Try opening the "large toolbar set" and simply drag it to the left side
>
> Took a call and by the time I hit send you'd found it ...

Thank you! It was easier to find the way the *day after* I did a
project in at least 3 hours (that would have taken only 30 minutes, if I
wasn't a bit rusty).

For instance, here is a challenge problem to the SU newbys that I ran
into: Try to draw a circle with just a little bit of the
perimeter/circumference missing, like 270-degrees, or 3/4 of a circle.
I relearned how to do it, indeed, in two different ways, but not without
getting a little frustrated first.

Cheers,
Bill



Mike Marlow

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Jul 21, 2015, 8:19:41 PM7/21/15
to
Leon wrote:

>
> Well deep in mind Mike that the precision of hidden mortises and
> tenons is not so important, and yes we are talking at least 64ths of
> an inch, when it comes to what you actually see.
>
> For instance if you are not cutting stock precisely the same length
> for rails for door or face frames, way more accurate than 1/128", you
> see gaps and cracks. Their lengths are not so important so much as
> their lengths have to be dead nuts the same.
>
> And then there was the last kitchen that Karl and I worked on where we
> were dealing with measurements in the 64ths of an inch gap between
> cabinet doors and drawers for the parts that you do see.
>
> Basically you have to know and recognize when you have to be anally
> accurate and when that is not so important. ;~)
>

Agreed. My point was not to diminish the times when that degree of accuracy
is relevant, but to acknowledge when it's not. We can get a little anal at
times here at the wRec and get carried away with pursuing precision when
it's not all that required. But - anal is good...

--

-Mike-
mmarlo...@windstream.net


Sonny

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Jul 21, 2015, 8:22:27 PM7/21/15
to
On Tuesday, July 21, 2015 at 3:25:47 PM UTC-5, John McCoy wrote:

> Curious how you planed them. Do you have access to a monster
> power planer, or a wide belt sander?

Initially, I had wanted to do the whole build by hand, including planing, no power tools, at all, but that turned out to be too big of job. I brought the boards to Lafayette Woodworks and they planed them. A nail was hit in the last board, so the guy stopped planing. That board remained 1/8" thicker than the other three.... 4 boards were planed and one board didn't pass the selection committee. In the end, the guy quoted me $25 for the planing. I paid him $50.

> > another issue, with respect to expansion/contraction movement....
> > there would be open "cracks" (separation) along the mating surfaces.

> Not sure I'm actually following this, but could you peg the
> tenons from below, and keep the joints tight that way? Then
> all the movement would be at the outer edge of the table.
>
> John

There was some confusion for me, too, with these doings: Glue the joints or not (and, now, dutchmans are in the mix). No glue meant 3 separate boards to contend with. Gluing the boards meant the "one piece" top would be heavy as heck and difficult to move, when/if need be. I had two options for attaching 1) the table top to the 2) two of two/three piece attaching mechanism (sliding dovetail assembly), which attached to 3) each leg unit. These combo of options presented for several alternatives, confusing when I tried to visualize/compare the workings of each option or option combo, as to which is best.

Leon's comment and, now, your comment reminded me: Well, duh, I don't have to worry about movement along a secured joint line, itself. As you say, its the edges of the outer boards and the center of the middle board that will move. I did realize this some months ago, but for some reason, I had completely forgotten about that...... thinking too much on the other options, I guess. Not the only time I've over-thought something and the mind went blank to the obvious. Must be the beer or highball, I use for mind food, and/or the Cajun music influence, when in the shop. There've been times, walking across the shop, and a good song is playing, I'll do a few two-steps along the way... keeps my blood flowing, but not necessarily my mind.

The tabletop, whether glued or not: I only need one fixed attachment to each leg unit. The rest of the width can move along the line of its leg. I don't need the top secured to the legs with any more attachments. The top's weight will/should keep it secure, otherwise, even with unruly folks crowded around it. The trestle board-leg units assembly is rock solid, when assembled.

Sonny

Leon

unread,
Jul 22, 2015, 10:28:25 AM7/22/15
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If you simply choose the "arc" tool. ;~) Start the arc and then type
in the degrees.

Electric Comet

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Jul 22, 2015, 10:38:54 AM7/22/15
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On Tue, 21 Jul 2015 17:22:24 -0700 (PDT)
Sonny <cedar...@aol.com> wrote:

> Initially, I had wanted to do the whole build by hand, including
> planing, no power tools, at all, but that turned out to be too big of
> job. I brought the boards to Lafayette Woodworks and they planed
> them. A nail was hit in the last board, so the guy stopped
> planing. That board remained 1/8" thicker than the other three....
> 4 boards were planed and one board didn't pass the selection
> committee. In the end, the guy quoted me $25 for the planing. I
> paid him $50.

Surprised he didn't run a metal detector over the material. I have a hand
held wand type detector. Once I calibrate it quickly I never miss a nail. Of
course there are always those boards I'm sure don't have nails that I don't
check that do have a nail in them. Funny part is that it was some old wood
from a fence and the nail was like butter. For me knots have been more
of a problem than nails. One knot chipped my planer blade.

If I read the dimensions right that's quite a big table. Is it a commision
project? It is almost 12 feet long so maybe it's a conference table?

But how did the lumber end up with nails in it?











Sonny

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Jul 22, 2015, 12:32:09 PM7/22/15
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On Wednesday, July 22, 2015 at 9:38:54 AM UTC-5, Electric Comet wrote:

> If I read the dimensions right that's quite a big table. Is it a commision
> project? It is almost 12 feet long so maybe it's a conference table?
>
> But how did the lumber end up with nails in it?

We demolished & salvaged an old cypress house, on the farm, and dozed two nearby walnut trees in the process. I had the log of one tree and several large limbs of the other tree milled. The other tree's trunk was no good for milling, plus it was highly suspect for having metal in it, being so close to the house, more so than the better tree. It's very common for trees, especially near homes, to have metal in them. Along old fence lines, trees likely have wire fencing and nails in them.

Before planing, the boards were thoroughly visibly inspected. Laf. Woodworks was as confident as I, that there were no nails in the boards. The nail was barely nicked and they decided it was no big deal, hence charging me only $25. The work was well worth more than that, to me. I was very pleased with the planing job. *The nail is still in the board, as character decor.

Five projects, so for, with the salvaged lumber and walnut lumber. There are a number of pics, for each, spread about my Flickr pages.
1) No pics, that I recall, were taken for the two bathroom corner cabinets.

2) Shaving horse, made from limb boards. Limb lumber is usually unstable, stress-loaded, not usually good for building stuff.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/8474198072/in/photostream

3) Faux mantle place, for the camp https://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/15384674712/in/photostream

4) Gun cabinet, for the camp
https://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/19147854679/in/photostream

5) In-progress trestle dining table, maybe for the camp, not sure yet. https://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/14314698708/in/photostream

Original log. Some parts of the forks and parts of the rootballs were trimmed and given to a woodturner friend - https://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/8141498429/in/photostream

Old cypress house. The roof's cross pieces, for nailing the wooden shingles to, were hand split boards, that the gun cabinet was made with.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/8141592708/in/photostream

Sonny

Bill

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Jul 22, 2015, 4:31:44 PM7/22/15
to
I figured that out later, when I was sketching some arcs! : )

Leon

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Jul 22, 2015, 5:22:36 PM7/22/15
to
;~) You know some times if you start with a blank screen and click on
all of those icons one at a time to see what they do....

LOL

That is how I learn. But that said I have been working with CAD
programs since 1986 and knowing "what/that" they can do some things is
half the battle.

good on you!

Bill

unread,
Jul 22, 2015, 5:53:55 PM7/22/15
to
Leon wrote:
>
> That is how I learn. But that said I have been working with CAD
> programs since 1986 and knowing "what/that" they can do some things is
> half the battle.
>
I remembered "what they can do" collectively. I just couldn't remember
how to use them to do it! That said, I thinking "preaching sketchup" is
good. I've come to the belief that "good art" is the result of "good
design". "good enough" is another topic (and a perfectly valid one).
Don't get me wound up! ; )


Bill

unread,
Jul 23, 2015, 6:24:18 PM7/23/15
to
I planted an 8' red maple today. It went in nice and "vertical" too,
sort of like a tree is supposed to be. Does that count as "Actual
Woodworking"? ; )

Bill

Electric Comet

unread,
Jul 23, 2015, 7:58:53 PM7/23/15
to
On Wed, 22 Jul 2015 09:32:03 -0700 (PDT)
Sonny <cedar...@aol.com> wrote:

> trunk was no good for milling, plus it was highly suspect for having
> metal in it, being so close to the house, more so than the better
> tree. It's very common for trees, especially near homes, to have
> metal in them. Along old fence lines, trees likely have wire
> fencing and nails in them.

good point I had not thought about


> Before planing, the boards were thoroughly visibly inspected. Laf.
> Woodworks was as confident as I, that there were no nails in the
> boards. The nail was barely nicked and they decided it was no big
> deal, hence charging me only $25. The work was well worth more than
> that, to me. I was very pleased with the planing job. *The nail is
> still in the board, as character decor.

can charge extra for that nail

>
> Five projects, so for, with the salvaged lumber and walnut lumber.
> There are a number of pics, for each, spread about my Flickr pages.

nice stuff some of that looks real stout



always have liked salvaged wood products
one other concern with salvage is bugs

i have seen them use space heaters and tarps and slow roast for a
few days









Sonny

unread,
Jul 23, 2015, 8:52:15 PM7/23/15
to
Sho-nuff!

Today, I donated some plants to the Master Gardeners, for their fall plant sale. The gardenias had woody stems. While at their gardens, I dressed up the Hobbit Hole, next to a big water oak, with some fresh Spanish moss.

Sonny

Sonny

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Jul 23, 2015, 9:04:15 PM7/23/15
to
On Thursday, July 23, 2015 at 6:58:53 PM UTC-5, Electric Comet wrote:

> > Five projects, so for, with the salvaged lumber and walnut lumber.


> nice stuff some of that looks real stout

Thanks. Long ago, I would build bulk furniture, etc, somewhat to compensate for my lack of skills. I'm getting better about that, but I do like the old(?) rural(?) bulky rustic look, to some extent & for some projects.

Sonny

Mike Marlow

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Jul 23, 2015, 9:12:37 PM7/23/15
to
Oh hell - call back when you turn it into lumber. Send pics...

--

-Mike-
mmarlo...@windstream.net


Bill

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Jul 23, 2015, 9:49:03 PM7/23/15
to
Mike Marlow wrote:
> Bill wrote:
>
>> I planted an 8' red maple today. It went in nice and "vertical" too,
>> sort of like a tree is supposed to be. Does that count as "Actual
>> Woodworking"? ; )
>>
> Oh hell - call back when you turn it into lumber.

I just Knew that was coming!



Mike Marlow

unread,
Jul 23, 2015, 10:18:11 PM7/23/15
to
Cool. BTW - at 8ft, it's already long enough for lumber - just have to put
a little weight on it now.

--

-Mike-
mmarlo...@windstream.net


Electric Comet

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Jul 23, 2015, 10:38:46 PM7/23/15
to
i like stuff that people care about doing especially if it is not a knock-off
or copy of something else

it always shows through

that old saying about don't let perfect get in the way of good enough
makes a lot of sense to me

i enjoy looking at museum quality pieces but it is not that fun to
obsess over minute details of fit and finish










Leon

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Jul 24, 2015, 10:13:26 AM7/24/15
to
Yes! Let us know what color yu paint it. ;~)

Mike Marlow

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Jul 24, 2015, 2:51:58 PM7/24/15
to
My bet - RED!!!

--

-Mike-
mmarlo...@windstream.net


Bill

unread,
Jul 24, 2015, 3:16:26 PM7/24/15
to
Mike Marlow wrote:
> Leon wrote:
>> On 7/23/2015 5:23 PM, Bill wrote:
>>> I planted an 8' red maple today. It went in nice and "vertical" too,
>>> sort of like a tree is supposed to be. Does that count as "Actual
>>> Woodworking"? ; )
>>>
>>> Bill
>> Yes! Let us know what color yu paint it. ;~)
> My bet - RED!!!
Like duh! Do they even make MAPLE paint?

Puckdropper at dot

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Jul 24, 2015, 3:48:26 PM7/24/15
to
Bill <BILL_...@whoknows.net> wrote in
news:mou2u...@news6.newsguy.com:
I found both "Sweet Maple" and "Birdseye Maple". No just "Maple" yet.

Personally, I mix my own. Usually I take brown and grey/silver and mix
them to a hue I like then spray the tree.

Puckdropper
--
Make it to fit, don't make it fit.

krw

unread,
Jul 24, 2015, 4:16:32 PM7/24/15
to
On Fri, 24 Jul 2015 14:50:18 -0400, "Mike Marlow"
<mmarlo...@windstream.net> wrote:

>Leon wrote:
>> On 7/23/2015 5:23 PM, Bill wrote:
>>> I planted an 8' red maple today. It went in nice and "vertical" too,
>>> sort of like a tree is supposed to be. Does that count as "Actual
>>> Woodworking"? ; )
>>>
>>> Bill
>>
>> Yes! Let us know what color yu paint it. ;~)
>
>My bet - RED!!!

It's maple, not cherry!

Bill

unread,
Jul 24, 2015, 4:25:52 PM7/24/15
to
Personally, I prefer to only paint trees that have died--to sort of
spruce them up... Brown for the trunk and green where there used to be
leaves (unless it's fall)... ; )

Bill


Bill

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Jul 24, 2015, 4:37:53 PM7/24/15
to

Mike Marlow

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Jul 24, 2015, 4:41:17 PM7/24/15
to
But... it's a RED Maple...

--

-Mike-
mmarlo...@windstream.net


Puckdropper at dot

unread,
Jul 25, 2015, 12:12:55 AM7/25/15
to
"Mike Marlow" <mmarlo...@windstream.net> wrote in
news:mou7qf$ad4$1...@dont-email.me:

> Bill wrote:
>> Puckdropper wrote:
>> Personally, I prefer to only paint trees that have died--to sort of
>> spruce them up... Brown for the trunk and green where there used to
>> be leaves (unless it's fall)... ; )
>>
>
> But... it's a RED Maple...
>

Maybe that's in the Fall. The rest of the year, it's brown and green
just like all the other trees. My sister has one in her yard that turns
a red color in fall. Most the others yellow and orange before dropping
their leaves.

I'm not sure what kind of tree it is, but I'm pretty sure it's not a
Toronto Maple Leaf Tree... Those are blue.

Swingman

unread,
Jul 25, 2015, 9:24:00 AM7/25/15
to
On 7/23/2015 5:23 PM, Bill wrote:
First 8' red maple I planted 13 years ago is over 30' now.

--
eWoodShop: www.eWoodShop.com
Wood Shop: www.e-WoodShop.net
https://www.google.com/+eWoodShop
https://plus.google.com/+KarlCaillouet/posts
http://www.custommade.com/by/ewoodshop/
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)

Leon

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Jul 25, 2015, 10:46:07 AM7/25/15
to
No one they have died they are "DEAD" maples. ;~)

Bill

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Jul 25, 2015, 4:36:12 PM7/25/15
to
Swingman wrote:
> On 7/23/2015 5:23 PM, Bill wrote:
>> I planted an 8' red maple today. It went in nice and "vertical" too,
>> sort of like a tree is supposed to be. Does that count as "Actual
>> Woodworking"? ; )
>
> First 8' red maple I planted 13 years ago is over 30' now.

Sounds like a good healthy tree. The label on the "Redpointe Red Maple"
I bought
says that it will reach 40-45 feet tall and 20-30 ft wide. If that
holds true, the utility
lines running to the house will be safe (a big factor in my selection).
SWMBO loved
the tree at first sight and no less so now that it is in the backyard.
The nursery suggested
watering it every day for the first 2 weeks or so, and we will do that.

We may have some bugs that are starting to eat at a few of the leaves.
Do you know if there
is something to prevent that (sorry if this is the wrong place to ask)?

krw

unread,
Jul 25, 2015, 5:31:29 PM7/25/15
to
On Sat, 25 Jul 2015 09:45:53 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet>
wrote:
Better DEAD than RED?

krw

unread,
Jul 25, 2015, 5:33:24 PM7/25/15
to
On Sat, 25 Jul 2015 16:35:12 -0400, Bill <BILL_...@whoknows.net>
wrote:
Bayer makes stuff you water into the ground that makes trees taste bad
to such critters. Works great!

Swingman

unread,
Jul 25, 2015, 5:42:14 PM7/25/15
to
When I build a house we usually have to remove a tree or two, which we
then must replace with the same diameter inches of new trees (must be
from an accepted tree species list).

The Drummond Red Maple is my favorite of the bunch and to fulfill the
requirements thus far have planted at least ten of them down through the
years.

AAMOF, I have one in my small backyard which is getting a bit out of
hand as to size and root system.

I routinely pass by the homes, where I have planted them in the front
yards, and they are absolutely more gorgeous with each passing year.

Sorry, can't help with the bugs ...

Markem

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Jul 25, 2015, 6:31:06 PM7/25/15
to
On Sat, 25 Jul 2015 16:35:12 -0400, Bill <BILL_...@whoknows.net>
wrote:

Dust with Diatomaceous Earth, it rip the guts out of the buggers.

Mark

Bill

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Jul 25, 2015, 7:33:18 PM7/25/15
to
Okay, between that (which I just happened to have on hand) and Bayer's
stuff that krw suggested, I'll make sure that the leaves are not
injested. Thank you for the tips!

Bill

J. Clarke

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Jul 25, 2015, 7:46:13 PM7/25/15
to
In article <mp16b...@news3.newsguy.com>, BILL_...@whoknows.net
says...
If they're caterpillars of any kind, try "Thuricide" or one of its
competitors.

Bill

unread,
Jul 25, 2015, 8:04:14 PM7/25/15
to
J. Clarke wrote:
> If they're caterpillars of any kind, try "Thuricide" or one of its
> competitors.
Thank you. We haven't identified what is doing the eating (and it hasn't
bothered me when they were eating the weed-trees 15 feet way). I'm
going to go out and look for the culprits now!

Puckdropper at dot

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Jul 25, 2015, 8:36:43 PM7/25/15
to
krw <k...@nowhere.com> wrote in
news:2008rapfn62s0orni...@4ax.com:
For our purposes at least! :-)

Lew Hodgett

unread,
Jul 25, 2015, 8:53:33 PM7/25/15
to
Markem wrote:

>Dust with Diatomaceous Earth, it rip the guts out of the buggers.
-------------------------------------------
SFWIW, major DE mining takes place here in SoCal.

Think US Borax.

In addition to bug killers, DE is exported to Europe for drug mfg.

Lew


krw

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Jul 25, 2015, 9:28:08 PM7/25/15
to
On Sat, 25 Jul 2015 17:53:30 -0700, "Lew Hodgett"
<sails...@verizon.net> wrote:

>Markem wrote:
>
>>Dust with Diatomaceous Earth, it rip the guts out of the buggers.
>-------------------------------------------
>SFWIW, major DE mining takes place here in SoCal.
>
>Think US Borax.

Borax? DE is not borax. DE isn't toxic at all. As mentioned, it's
abrasive (exoskeletons of microscopic critters) and cuts the bugs up.
Boric Acid (NOT borax) is an effective insecticide against ants and
such.

>In addition to bug killers, DE is exported to Europe for drug mfg.

Not sure what it's used for in drug manufacturing but it is a filter
medium.

Bill

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Jul 25, 2015, 11:19:09 PM7/25/15
to
Bill wrote:

Thank you. We haven't identified what is doing the eating (and it hasn't
bothered me when they were eating the weed-trees 15 feet way). I'm
going to go out and look for the culprits now!
---

All I found, besides holes in some of the leaves, was a moth that flew
out--not sure if it was to blame or not. We'll be buying some "Bayer's
Tree and Shrub" tomorrow, which krw suggested. Thanks all!

Bill

brain...@gmail.com

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Mar 7, 2016, 7:09:53 AM3/7/16
to
For Making Woodfurniture you need to buy Woodworking machine tool which help you to make your furniture creatively.For online buy woodworking machine tool you can visit the site https://www.woodfordtooling.com/ here you can buy any brand machine blades.

Thanks,
Brain

Trenbidia

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Mar 7, 2016, 12:52:28 PM3/7/16
to
I couldn't believe that a British company would post such garbled
grammar. It didn't - the post came from India.


--
Nobody expects the Spanish Inquisition!
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