A little variation on the usual Theme.

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CHJ

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  • Oak and Wanut, 155mm dia. max.
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+1 There Chas Very impressive work just wish I could master it they seem to fall apart when I do them
regards
Bill
 
EnErY":x6odc4m6 said:
...... just wish I could master it they seem to fall apart when I do them
regards
Bill

1. How dry is your wood.
2. How accurate are your joints.
3. What sort of surface finish do you have on joint faces.
4. What Glue are you using, how fresh is it.
5. How long do you wait for the glue to completely cure.
6. What fails, Glue Joint or Wood.
7. Any significance or trend in the wood grain orientations that fail.

What, Where, When, Why. analyse what is going wrong, once you can answer those then you will more than likely have the How.
 
Recently saw some work from someone who was doing similar things using the patterns from a book on quilting. Right up your street Chas, spiral effects done using triangles of wood.

Pete
 
Bodrighy":1hjkr3js said:
Recently saw some work from someone who was doing similar things using the patterns from a book on quilting. Right up your street Chas, spiral effects done using triangles of wood.

Pete
Will have to have a look into that theme Pete, it was the quilting idea that set me off with this range. reminds me I have a request for some more of those.
 
I'm still frightened putting chisel into wood - I presume the tree don't grow that way so what glue do you trust to hold the pieces together. I still cannot fathom out how you cut the wood to make that spiral lid its excellent. Gonna have to get some books.
 
fred55":21nc9qr9 said:
..... what glue do you trust to hold the pieces together. ......

You can use a good quality PVA, only reservation is that joints may creep over time (you can feel the join) as wood moves with moisture changes
You can use CA Glue, care needed on ensuring wood is dry and noting grain orientation to avoid joint failure if wood moves.
I now use Cascamite, very strong, does not creep. Considerable care is needed to observe wood moisture content and grain orientation to avoid wood splitting with changes in atmospheric moisture levels.
 

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