i have the 310 robland combo, rips 100mm x 1800mm long on the slider dead straight,600mm between blade and fence, planes and thicknesses 300mm plus spindle. not the best i know but also not the most expensive
i have some kitchen cabinets with a white painted finish and the grain shows through the paint ,does any one know how this is done please as i would like to achieve the same
as a point of interest to me,how can you tell rhodesian from burma teak please. i myself have a small amount of iroko and burma teak that i can vouch for and cannot tell the difference
i planted a beech hedge, the local council official came to visit soon after and informed me that it was not a native species, i agreed but said its only been here 1000 years will it ever qualify as native. no answer
so you just do not build any thing till the friction action takes place. joke, piles are driven, concrete poured and a few days after the designed load is applied on top of the pile and any sinkage is detected with a dial gauge.that is if you want to trust your work.
all that with tubes seems to defeat the principle of a pile. a pile relies on the depth of and the friction of the sides of the concrete on the hole in the ground