I am making a new desk at the moment with turned tapered legs.
Since I don’t have a lathe at the moment I made the legs the table saw using a shop made jig
And turned the angled tenons with a router and a another jig
the tenons fit in to a the corresponding hole drilled in to the two battens.
The battens are attached with two threaded inserts with enough room to allow the bottom section of desk to expand and contract.
On my original run I attached everything with no stretchers and flipped the desk over. There was quite a bit of wobble.
First of all the legs were quite thin so there was some flex/ bend and second of all the batten was only attached at one point in the middle at each end which cause a bit of movement at that point.
I have since turned some new ash legs which are thicker which should limit any flex andbending of the wood. the original ones were to thin from a aesthetic veiw point anyway.
The next battens I will make will include two bolts at either side on both end to eliminate any movement there
something like this.
I am also thinking about adding a stretcher between both legs like this.
I made a 30 mm dowel to match the corresponding stretcher mortises which I will drill out at the drill press.
theoretically I would need to just drill two perfectly parallel holes at the correct angle to glue the dowel in to but since the legs are both tapered and at an angle I’m having a hard time figuring out how to do this.
Assuming I would have to tilt the drill press table to the same angle of the legs and then drill the same point on each leg with the forester bit?
having a hard time finding any information about this on the net? would any of you guys have any tips.
Since I don’t have a lathe at the moment I made the legs the table saw using a shop made jig
And turned the angled tenons with a router and a another jig
the tenons fit in to a the corresponding hole drilled in to the two battens.
The battens are attached with two threaded inserts with enough room to allow the bottom section of desk to expand and contract.
On my original run I attached everything with no stretchers and flipped the desk over. There was quite a bit of wobble.
First of all the legs were quite thin so there was some flex/ bend and second of all the batten was only attached at one point in the middle at each end which cause a bit of movement at that point.
I have since turned some new ash legs which are thicker which should limit any flex andbending of the wood. the original ones were to thin from a aesthetic veiw point anyway.
The next battens I will make will include two bolts at either side on both end to eliminate any movement there
something like this.
I am also thinking about adding a stretcher between both legs like this.
I made a 30 mm dowel to match the corresponding stretcher mortises which I will drill out at the drill press.
theoretically I would need to just drill two perfectly parallel holes at the correct angle to glue the dowel in to but since the legs are both tapered and at an angle I’m having a hard time figuring out how to do this.
Assuming I would have to tilt the drill press table to the same angle of the legs and then drill the same point on each leg with the forester bit?
having a hard time finding any information about this on the net? would any of you guys have any tips.