Fantastic craftsmanship in such a simple design

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wizer

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Have a look at this

539-2875-1.jpg


539-2875-2.jpg


http://www.custommade.com/gallery-detai ... l=2875&p=2

It looks so simple in construction but I'd have lost a stone sweating over those mitres.
 
wizer":3vidv2hc said:
It looks so simple in construction but I'd have lost a stone sweating over those mitres.

Easy with the right saw and a domino :wink:
 
"Estimated cost to produce a similar item: $1501-$3000"
Flippin 'eck.

I assume a good part of that cost if to cover looking for a board with a suitable opening in it. That's mucho!
 
wizer":1tuptlmx said:
It looks so simple in construction but I'd have lost a stone sweating over those mitres.

The mitres shouldn't be any problem at all with a reasonable table saw and a good blade. Looks like the person making it f***ed it up though as the grain on the left hand section in the 2nd picture doesn't line up correctly.

Steve
 
Would you expect them to line up fully though?
I'd have thought the kerf for the initial cut would lose at least a few mm of wood and if the mitres were then cut to meet the top edge perfectly with no extra loss that'd probably be enough to lose the line up.

Or am I wrong?
 
yeh it looks like he's moved it over a bit for some reason. Oh well, nice idea. Still better than I could do ;)
 
I think he cut the mitre on the wrong end of the narrow leg, either that or he could't hold the waney edge against his crosscut fence.

Jason
 
promhandicam
I'm not all that sure what it would look like if it was just the thickness of the kerf - but since I'm about the least experienced woodworker on this forum I'll quite happily bow to your take on it.

That said...

BOOOOO!!!
HISSSSS!!!
WHAT A WASTE OF FIREWOOD!!!

*ahem*
Sorry. :p
 
BigShot":aafrjr2l said:
I'm not all that sure what it would look like if it was just the thickness of the kerf . . .

Worst case scenario would be if the grain was converging like this sketch.
mitre.jpg

With 5mm cut out of the middle there is still little offset in the pattern.

With actual wood grain, even cutting 10mm out there is still a fairly good match
mitrewood.jpg


Even better if you offset the two halves by 2mm to get the grain to line up again.
mitrewood2.jpg

Steve
 

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