StevieB
Established Member
When wives want something made they generally drop the odd hint here and there, make the odd comment and are happy to wait at least a little while while you select suitable timber, prepare your tools and generally take 3 weeks to even begin. When a 3 year old wants something made they ask avery 5 minutes. Literally every 5 minutes. Perhaps I should start from the beginning. I have a 3 year old son who is train mad. We have Thomas the tank engine DVD's, Thomas toys, other train toys, he watches trains on you tube, wants to ride on steam trains wherever we go and so on. He has the dedication to a subject that only the profoundly autistic or a 3 year old can have. So we indulge him quietly, put you tube on for him when we want 5 minutes peace and generally hope it will blow its course and he will move onto something else. In the meantime we are constantly tripping over train toys since he has a box for his trains and generally tips them all out to find the one he wants.
So Friday afternoon my wife was looking at the internet with him when they come across something to appeal to both of them - a train shelf. Yup, a train shelf. Perfect to keep the trains off the floor, perfect to keep the 3 year old happy. As soon as I get in Friday from work - will you build me a train shelf Daddy? Then every 5 minutes until Sunday lunchtime when I finally relent. Now I have to admit to being worn down by this approach. I didn't have any suitable timber, I didn't really have the time, and I didn't really need the help of a 3 year old. I got it anyway and we started by looking through my scrap box.
Eventually we came across some 70mm x 18mm pine and some 90mm x 18mm pine and a bit of an old pine shelf which was about 20mm thick and variable width - covered in paint and a bit knocked but with a sand and a bit of careful selection it might just be enough. So I got my own back on the wife and sent the 3 year old to ask to do cake baking while I got stuck in. I have to admit to having no plan other than a small picture seen on the internet, and no clear idea of what I was doing. So first job was to rip the wood to uniform width, cut some grooves to stop the trains sliding off the shelf and do a test on a bit of scrap
OK, so far so good. Train fits but have so little wood I cannot afford to make a mistake. so I get stuck in and rout up the shelves. Not sure why, but I decide to test another train. They are random lengths so no good plotting spacings but that shouldnt be a problem. Bu**er me but they trains have different wheel gauges - Harvey here doesn't fit :roll:
Not much - about 3mm, but enough to make me have to reset the router and widen the grooves. Making it up as a I go along we move onto the sides of the unit. Bit dodgy routing slots in the middle of a thin wide board on a table so rather than take the router out I did them on the tablesaw. Now its about here I should point out that I rounded the front edge of the shelves and the sides with a block plane and random orbit sander. Thinking ahead (for the only time in this project) I did this before cutting the shelf housings in the sides to make the job easier. The point about this is that you then need to be careful as the sides thus have a front and a back edge. Its is a very silly idea to mark out for housings without taking this into account since you will end up with mismatch sides. The solution, should this ever happen to you, is to shorten the bottom spacer a bit and recut two housings - this only works if your shelves were originally equally spaced. Do not ask me how I know this, just take it on trust - please!
So eventually, by now not in the best frame of mind considering I hadn't wanted to start this in the first place, had consequently got it wrong, had loose housings because I measured from the 1 20mm shelf, not the 4 18mm shelves, nicked my finger with the block plane... I ended up with this (the sharp eyed among you may notice the lower shelf is a different spacing to the others....)
Now I am not proud of this, it is level and square but that is about the best you can say of it. It is also smooth to prevent splinters. Apart from that it is held together by screws and a dab of wood glue, it is ugly, it is not stained or painted, it has sloppy joints and is generally unappealing. But in use - it does exactly what the design brief demanded - it's a train shelf. Not pretty, but practical
And boy was he happy with it. Spent ages lining up the trains, arranging them in order of favourites, and so on. And do you know the best thing of all - now he wants another one for his carriages ](*,) :wink:
So the moral of this build is - it doesn't have to be pretty, not everything you do needs to be of exhibition quality. Something knocked together on a Sunday afternoon from scrap can be just as appreciated as the most lovingly designed and crafted piece of work. The trick is knowing this before and during the build so you get pleasure from making it too. If I had remembered this yesterday it might even have turned out to be enjoyable for me as well......
Steve.
So Friday afternoon my wife was looking at the internet with him when they come across something to appeal to both of them - a train shelf. Yup, a train shelf. Perfect to keep the trains off the floor, perfect to keep the 3 year old happy. As soon as I get in Friday from work - will you build me a train shelf Daddy? Then every 5 minutes until Sunday lunchtime when I finally relent. Now I have to admit to being worn down by this approach. I didn't have any suitable timber, I didn't really have the time, and I didn't really need the help of a 3 year old. I got it anyway and we started by looking through my scrap box.
Eventually we came across some 70mm x 18mm pine and some 90mm x 18mm pine and a bit of an old pine shelf which was about 20mm thick and variable width - covered in paint and a bit knocked but with a sand and a bit of careful selection it might just be enough. So I got my own back on the wife and sent the 3 year old to ask to do cake baking while I got stuck in. I have to admit to having no plan other than a small picture seen on the internet, and no clear idea of what I was doing. So first job was to rip the wood to uniform width, cut some grooves to stop the trains sliding off the shelf and do a test on a bit of scrap
OK, so far so good. Train fits but have so little wood I cannot afford to make a mistake. so I get stuck in and rout up the shelves. Not sure why, but I decide to test another train. They are random lengths so no good plotting spacings but that shouldnt be a problem. Bu**er me but they trains have different wheel gauges - Harvey here doesn't fit :roll:
Not much - about 3mm, but enough to make me have to reset the router and widen the grooves. Making it up as a I go along we move onto the sides of the unit. Bit dodgy routing slots in the middle of a thin wide board on a table so rather than take the router out I did them on the tablesaw. Now its about here I should point out that I rounded the front edge of the shelves and the sides with a block plane and random orbit sander. Thinking ahead (for the only time in this project) I did this before cutting the shelf housings in the sides to make the job easier. The point about this is that you then need to be careful as the sides thus have a front and a back edge. Its is a very silly idea to mark out for housings without taking this into account since you will end up with mismatch sides. The solution, should this ever happen to you, is to shorten the bottom spacer a bit and recut two housings - this only works if your shelves were originally equally spaced. Do not ask me how I know this, just take it on trust - please!
So eventually, by now not in the best frame of mind considering I hadn't wanted to start this in the first place, had consequently got it wrong, had loose housings because I measured from the 1 20mm shelf, not the 4 18mm shelves, nicked my finger with the block plane... I ended up with this (the sharp eyed among you may notice the lower shelf is a different spacing to the others....)
Now I am not proud of this, it is level and square but that is about the best you can say of it. It is also smooth to prevent splinters. Apart from that it is held together by screws and a dab of wood glue, it is ugly, it is not stained or painted, it has sloppy joints and is generally unappealing. But in use - it does exactly what the design brief demanded - it's a train shelf. Not pretty, but practical
And boy was he happy with it. Spent ages lining up the trains, arranging them in order of favourites, and so on. And do you know the best thing of all - now he wants another one for his carriages ](*,) :wink:
So the moral of this build is - it doesn't have to be pretty, not everything you do needs to be of exhibition quality. Something knocked together on a Sunday afternoon from scrap can be just as appreciated as the most lovingly designed and crafted piece of work. The trick is knowing this before and during the build so you get pleasure from making it too. If I had remembered this yesterday it might even have turned out to be enjoyable for me as well......
Steve.