Steve Maskery
Established Member
A follow on Thread to the Workshop Build Thread
A couple of years ago I started to make a coffee table. It is going to be pseudo A&C style, with wedged tenons through breadboard ends. And if you think that that is a recipe for disaster, you would be right, if it were not for the fact that I have every intention of cheating.
I did this at the Community Workshop where I volunteer, but it was difficult to do, TBH. There is nowhere to leave stuff from one week to the next, things grow legs, and anyway, I'm supposed to be there to supervise and help, rather than doing my own thing. So I got as far as gluing up the boards for the top and fitting, but not securing, the breadboard ends.
It has stood propped up against the wall for two years and has darkened somewhat, but it currently looks like this:
I wish there was a little more catspaw in the bottom left corner, but it is as well-balanced as could make it with the material I had.
The underside is not quite as pretty. The end of one of the BB ends has some rather inyerface sapwood that is starting to spalt.
OK, I know I won't see that long white dart, but the end of it will show. Not much, but it will be there and I know from bitter experience that if it is there I shall see it and it will bug me.
What to do?
Well if the BB ends were a bit wider, I could simply rip 6mm off the inside edge, but they are already a tad narrower than I would really have liked.
I decided to patch it.
So a hunt around resulted in some bits of oak. The first piece is not a very good match at all.
That is because it is American oak and my table top is English oak. That won't do. But the next piece was much better.
So I examined the endgrain to see how best to cut a patch.
A piece from the middle would give me a decent match, I thought.
I decided to try to cleave the wood, but it wasn't as clean as I had hoped.
Actually I wasn't happy with my first attempt, but the second was much better.
Then I sawed off the spalted section with my dovetail saw. Although the teeth are fine, they are shaped for a rip cut, so it worked very well. I cleaned up with my 311.
A couple of years ago I started to make a coffee table. It is going to be pseudo A&C style, with wedged tenons through breadboard ends. And if you think that that is a recipe for disaster, you would be right, if it were not for the fact that I have every intention of cheating.
I did this at the Community Workshop where I volunteer, but it was difficult to do, TBH. There is nowhere to leave stuff from one week to the next, things grow legs, and anyway, I'm supposed to be there to supervise and help, rather than doing my own thing. So I got as far as gluing up the boards for the top and fitting, but not securing, the breadboard ends.
It has stood propped up against the wall for two years and has darkened somewhat, but it currently looks like this:
I wish there was a little more catspaw in the bottom left corner, but it is as well-balanced as could make it with the material I had.
The underside is not quite as pretty. The end of one of the BB ends has some rather inyerface sapwood that is starting to spalt.
OK, I know I won't see that long white dart, but the end of it will show. Not much, but it will be there and I know from bitter experience that if it is there I shall see it and it will bug me.
What to do?
Well if the BB ends were a bit wider, I could simply rip 6mm off the inside edge, but they are already a tad narrower than I would really have liked.
I decided to patch it.
So a hunt around resulted in some bits of oak. The first piece is not a very good match at all.
That is because it is American oak and my table top is English oak. That won't do. But the next piece was much better.
So I examined the endgrain to see how best to cut a patch.
A piece from the middle would give me a decent match, I thought.
I decided to try to cleave the wood, but it wasn't as clean as I had hoped.
Actually I wasn't happy with my first attempt, but the second was much better.
Then I sawed off the spalted section with my dovetail saw. Although the teeth are fine, they are shaped for a rip cut, so it worked very well. I cleaned up with my 311.