This is my use for offcuts. Made a few years ago.
Alan
Alan
As above. But doesnt have to be a solid section, you can laminate small pieces together like plywood and turn that.Hi, Excuse my ignorance - but what is a "pen blank"
I have similar with the pipes, starting with sections of stink pipe and downpipe all about a foot long but hot melt glued to a base board which is large enough to prevent the thing's toppling over.You also asked how to store it, this is how I do my offcuts the shelf has 465 on it, it’s how deep the shelf is, so an indication as to how long the pieces of wood are, unless it’s rare anything shorter usually goes in the firewood bin, the cardboard tubes are free from most carpet shops.
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He has a 3 sectioned rack, month 1 offcuts go in first section, month 2 in second section and month 3 in third section. Month 4 all the offcuts get thrown out of rack 1 and he starts filling that one again, next month he throws out everything in rack 2 and starts using that one etc...
Thank you Ian. I actually turned a couple of pieces for the landlady and took them back the following day. Suitably impressed when a punter walked in the pub and said they're nice , are they for sale? £20 later we had free drinks for the evening. Result all roundYou have a wonderfully thin edge to that bowl Linus, very nice fine work.
Pubs, they were the days,I hope you show it to the landlord and take him a bit of rubbish to burn instead. Ian
Don't get me wrong, if you have a plan for bits, hang on to them but most people have an idea that "this piece might be useful for something" when they know in their hearts that it won't be!
This is a genuine question so please don't think I'm making any kind of statement about emissions from woodburners. I imagine that the glues used in MDF, chipboard and plywood are some sort of carbon based compound, so when they burn would produce the same sort of emissions as the wood itself? If so, what's the problem? (Perhaps I should say 'additional problem').
The problem would be the nasty smelling fumes, I assume. Even the most efficient and hottest burner needs to be opened to put in more wood, and some smoke always escapes. I've learned - eventually - to open our cassette stove very slowy to avoid drawing smoke out into the living room!
Guilty as charged!!!Maybe not offcut but I've been known to filch the odd log from the pub firewood. Talk about waste. Amazing what people will burn!
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