I was in my workshop yesterday processing my 2nd pallet load of Baltic pine woodblock flooring described here and found that with this batch I was getting ~25% wastage since these blocks had shrunk such that when viewed on end the block sides were almost v shaped top to bottom and by the time I had straightened one edge to 90 degree to the top the block overall was undersized by 2-3mm in comparison to my target finished width of 71mm.
So to salvage these I planned to trim the non-straightened edge by running through my table saw to take ~5mm off and then run them through the jointer to clean the face up and using strips from a sacrificial block laminate them back to the desired size.
This was a bit of a diversion from my prior workflow but I thought it worth the effort to save more blocks from the skip and whilst it was a mind numbingly repetitive process I thought tbh the whole job from start to end was similarly repetitive but with a good workflow was doable!
So set the fence on the saw and started processing the undersized blocks ripping the longer side with the other finished side against the fence. My table saw is a cheapo APTC model with almost farcical dust extraction so I had my 100mm chip extractor pipe taped up onto the factory fitted shroud encasing the blade and the excess merely extracting residual dust from the table saw body.
My chip extractor is a home-built one using a 220l oil drum sized plastic drum with a 450mm tall cyclone fabbed out of 2mm perspex in a routed frame the same diameter as the drum top and atop that a re-purposed Jet DC-1100a motor/fan unit moving 27L/min.
Whilst processing the blocks pushing them through with a push stick, I was getting some burn marks and the odd bit of smoke came off the tip of the tct blade where it was cutting through the bitumen on the bottom (uppermost) side of the blocks and occasionally the odd spark where I presume the bitumen had fragments of concrete oversite embedded...
I was down to my last 4 blocks when I noticed something smouldering between the gap in the table and the blade, so powered off/disconnected and poured a little water into the gap and took the screwed on side of the table off to take a closer look. Matted around the sides of the blade was a lot of wood fragments and stringy wood fibres so I cleaned these out and reassembled and proceeded to trim the last few blocks.
By this time the overriding smell in the workshop was of hot bitumen and as I turned around to turn off the dust exctractor - it's on a radio remote as the cyclone/drum is located in the far corner of my 4 x 5m shop, I noticed that there were what looked like furnace intensity flames visible through the perspex window cut in the drum as a level indicator...
Panicking I powered it off and gingerly felt the outside of the plastic drum which was noticeably warm but not yet hot, and as the only way to get the drum out is to lift off the motor/fan assembly which weighs ~35kg and is 1.5m off the ground - so shoulder height for me and so given the difficulty in demounting this safely with the drum contents on fire I pulled the whole assembly onto it's side - the drum was only maybe 1/4 full so the whole assembly was at this point decidedly top heavy... the motor and cyclone crashed to the floor and I then grabbed the top of the drum and hauled it outside and emptied the contents onto the lawn at a safe distance from my wooden workshop.
I then ran back into the workshop to check there wasn't anything alight inside - it was pretty smoky so I opened up all the windows and went back outside to deal with the smouldering heap.
It took 4 watering cans of water ~4 gallons to dampen it off!
Phew! that was a close call, I think throughout I was adrenaline powered and tbh only today as I write this do I realise how close a call this all was - the risk both to me and my workshop going up in flames does not bear thinking about.
The only casualty in all this is the cyclone which is fubar and a minor scratch on my hand so I think I got off pretty lightly given what could have a Darwin Award moment for me....
I am now pondering what fire protection I ought to have - a fire extinguisher has always been on my todo list but I somehow never got around to buying one, however now I question what I would/could have done even if I had one
Assembled with a fire in the drum there is no easy access to douse with either a powder or CO2 - I guess perhaps with the fan on I could have directed a powder one into the air intake but am not so sure enough would fall into the drum to smother the fire.
Equally with the amount of water required to dampen the drum contents and whilst assembled the lack of ability to effectively direct it a water based extinguisher would not have worked effectively either.
Grateful for any thoughts and advice from others on this forum as to how best to mitigate this, I certainly am giving it a lot of thought....
Stay Safe everyone!!
/Ed
So to salvage these I planned to trim the non-straightened edge by running through my table saw to take ~5mm off and then run them through the jointer to clean the face up and using strips from a sacrificial block laminate them back to the desired size.
This was a bit of a diversion from my prior workflow but I thought it worth the effort to save more blocks from the skip and whilst it was a mind numbingly repetitive process I thought tbh the whole job from start to end was similarly repetitive but with a good workflow was doable!
So set the fence on the saw and started processing the undersized blocks ripping the longer side with the other finished side against the fence. My table saw is a cheapo APTC model with almost farcical dust extraction so I had my 100mm chip extractor pipe taped up onto the factory fitted shroud encasing the blade and the excess merely extracting residual dust from the table saw body.
My chip extractor is a home-built one using a 220l oil drum sized plastic drum with a 450mm tall cyclone fabbed out of 2mm perspex in a routed frame the same diameter as the drum top and atop that a re-purposed Jet DC-1100a motor/fan unit moving 27L/min.
Whilst processing the blocks pushing them through with a push stick, I was getting some burn marks and the odd bit of smoke came off the tip of the tct blade where it was cutting through the bitumen on the bottom (uppermost) side of the blocks and occasionally the odd spark where I presume the bitumen had fragments of concrete oversite embedded...
I was down to my last 4 blocks when I noticed something smouldering between the gap in the table and the blade, so powered off/disconnected and poured a little water into the gap and took the screwed on side of the table off to take a closer look. Matted around the sides of the blade was a lot of wood fragments and stringy wood fibres so I cleaned these out and reassembled and proceeded to trim the last few blocks.
By this time the overriding smell in the workshop was of hot bitumen and as I turned around to turn off the dust exctractor - it's on a radio remote as the cyclone/drum is located in the far corner of my 4 x 5m shop, I noticed that there were what looked like furnace intensity flames visible through the perspex window cut in the drum as a level indicator...
Panicking I powered it off and gingerly felt the outside of the plastic drum which was noticeably warm but not yet hot, and as the only way to get the drum out is to lift off the motor/fan assembly which weighs ~35kg and is 1.5m off the ground - so shoulder height for me and so given the difficulty in demounting this safely with the drum contents on fire I pulled the whole assembly onto it's side - the drum was only maybe 1/4 full so the whole assembly was at this point decidedly top heavy... the motor and cyclone crashed to the floor and I then grabbed the top of the drum and hauled it outside and emptied the contents onto the lawn at a safe distance from my wooden workshop.
I then ran back into the workshop to check there wasn't anything alight inside - it was pretty smoky so I opened up all the windows and went back outside to deal with the smouldering heap.
It took 4 watering cans of water ~4 gallons to dampen it off!
Phew! that was a close call, I think throughout I was adrenaline powered and tbh only today as I write this do I realise how close a call this all was - the risk both to me and my workshop going up in flames does not bear thinking about.
The only casualty in all this is the cyclone which is fubar and a minor scratch on my hand so I think I got off pretty lightly given what could have a Darwin Award moment for me....
I am now pondering what fire protection I ought to have - a fire extinguisher has always been on my todo list but I somehow never got around to buying one, however now I question what I would/could have done even if I had one
Assembled with a fire in the drum there is no easy access to douse with either a powder or CO2 - I guess perhaps with the fan on I could have directed a powder one into the air intake but am not so sure enough would fall into the drum to smother the fire.
Equally with the amount of water required to dampen the drum contents and whilst assembled the lack of ability to effectively direct it a water based extinguisher would not have worked effectively either.
Grateful for any thoughts and advice from others on this forum as to how best to mitigate this, I certainly am giving it a lot of thought....
Stay Safe everyone!!
/Ed