ScottyT
Established Member
Been a while since I posted any woodwork on here, but I’ve got a decent job building an oak bridge, the usual start to finish style I’ll post as I go I think, it’s a shade over 5M long, gentle curve in it with lattice in-fills to stop any spills over the side.
It’ll be a good job machining wise as everything will get a good workout, and it’ll involve some practical elements along the way to get over and under a few things.
Pretty decent drawing to get the salient details from and to give you an idea of what the design is. It’ll be a mixture of air dried oak and some kiln dried. The main beams will be 5.1m long and 600 wide by 100 thick. I’ll machine them in one piece, this will present some logistical headaches i reckon but it’ll be no real problem i don’t think (it’s the sheer size of them and being able to negotiate the rest of the machines whilst feeding it on the spindle, I won’t know until I’m in there with the workpiece but using the follower i reckon I can do it)
The tools for the most important job, the rod. I’ve had to make a staging to draw it on as I need it as level as is possible, and I have nowhere that’s flat where I work. I used a traditional site level and some odds and ends of material to create it, and 4 and a bit sheets of 12mm mdf laid down on it ready to roll.
That’s a pretty hefty trammel, 12 metres plus I think to get the first radius, it rises to 350 from nothing so very gentle and it’s going to be superb to machine. I had to Introduce a timber to take the sag out of the stick my trammels are on for greater accuracy.
I haven’t made a curved bridge before so I’m very much looking forward to this one. I’ll post up in the coming days to take you through my finished Rod, it’s the most critical part of the job as always.
Scotty
It’ll be a good job machining wise as everything will get a good workout, and it’ll involve some practical elements along the way to get over and under a few things.
Pretty decent drawing to get the salient details from and to give you an idea of what the design is. It’ll be a mixture of air dried oak and some kiln dried. The main beams will be 5.1m long and 600 wide by 100 thick. I’ll machine them in one piece, this will present some logistical headaches i reckon but it’ll be no real problem i don’t think (it’s the sheer size of them and being able to negotiate the rest of the machines whilst feeding it on the spindle, I won’t know until I’m in there with the workpiece but using the follower i reckon I can do it)
The tools for the most important job, the rod. I’ve had to make a staging to draw it on as I need it as level as is possible, and I have nowhere that’s flat where I work. I used a traditional site level and some odds and ends of material to create it, and 4 and a bit sheets of 12mm mdf laid down on it ready to roll.
That’s a pretty hefty trammel, 12 metres plus I think to get the first radius, it rises to 350 from nothing so very gentle and it’s going to be superb to machine. I had to Introduce a timber to take the sag out of the stick my trammels are on for greater accuracy.
I haven’t made a curved bridge before so I’m very much looking forward to this one. I’ll post up in the coming days to take you through my finished Rod, it’s the most critical part of the job as always.
Scotty