Okay, so the hall renovation saga continues apace. Circumstances, distractions and illnesses have all contrived to make this a much longer project than i would have liked, but there's nothing new there, for me at at any rate.
I've got the main staircase built, have had for a while now actually, as per Roys advice here.
so now it looks like this
instead of this
The old one really was alot more beyond repair than even I thought. After we'd ripped the old one out we discovered, for instance, that the wall-side string was split from end to end - it was pretty much only being held together by 100 years of paint and goodwill from above, along with a generous quantity of heavy duty angle brackets.
Anyway, the next stage, now that the resulting hole (I moved them back about 3 feet) has been concreted and screeded, is to replace these 3 steps from the kitchen level up to the hall/lounge.
The hall floor has been replaced with new T&G redwood and will be sanded and sealed to match the lounge, rather than our original plan of carpeting. This means that these steps will now have to be made "properly" of timber rather than the MDF/ply used on the main stairs, and sanded/sealed to match the new hall floor.
I've decided to do this with cut stringers and wedges, and a homemade jig (the small size makes this feasable for me to do singlehandedly), but I'm unsure about which cutter to use for the housings. I've seen a "router workshop" video where a straight cutter is used, but proprietry jigs like the Trend one use a large dovetail cutter.
Which is best, does anyone know? If I use a dovetail cutter what angle should it be, and do I need to match that angle on the ends of the treads and risers? (I can see the setting out getting very tricky if so).
I have a feeling this is a lot simpler than I'm making it in my mind, but I could do with some advice from someone who's actually done this.
Any takers?
I've got the main staircase built, have had for a while now actually, as per Roys advice here.
so now it looks like this
instead of this
The old one really was alot more beyond repair than even I thought. After we'd ripped the old one out we discovered, for instance, that the wall-side string was split from end to end - it was pretty much only being held together by 100 years of paint and goodwill from above, along with a generous quantity of heavy duty angle brackets.
Anyway, the next stage, now that the resulting hole (I moved them back about 3 feet) has been concreted and screeded, is to replace these 3 steps from the kitchen level up to the hall/lounge.
The hall floor has been replaced with new T&G redwood and will be sanded and sealed to match the lounge, rather than our original plan of carpeting. This means that these steps will now have to be made "properly" of timber rather than the MDF/ply used on the main stairs, and sanded/sealed to match the new hall floor.
I've decided to do this with cut stringers and wedges, and a homemade jig (the small size makes this feasable for me to do singlehandedly), but I'm unsure about which cutter to use for the housings. I've seen a "router workshop" video where a straight cutter is used, but proprietry jigs like the Trend one use a large dovetail cutter.
Which is best, does anyone know? If I use a dovetail cutter what angle should it be, and do I need to match that angle on the ends of the treads and risers? (I can see the setting out getting very tricky if so).
I have a feeling this is a lot simpler than I'm making it in my mind, but I could do with some advice from someone who's actually done this.
Any takers?