dewi
Established Member
- Joined
- 1 Oct 2007
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Hi everyone - I thought I would introduce myself - what a great site this is for novices like me - I have over the years done a few woodworking projects but always with hand power tools rather than proper machines - as I am no longer able to work for medical reasons I need something to play with when I feel up to it - so as I have a big brick built slated roof workshop some 32 x 22 feet and 14 foot high at the end of the garden I built some 25 years ago ‘making sawdust and chippings' is ideal for me - they have taken my driving licence away until I ‘get better' so I am stuck on me own all day - the locals call my workshop the chalet because that's exactly what it looks like - it's even got PVC windows courtesy of a local company manufacturing them that employs people that cannot make frames to the spec they are given - thus they have hundreds of ‘unwanted' frames cheap - about a tenner a frame is average for any size window and all doors including twin patio ones about fifty pounds - they only need to be two or three mm out of spec for them to be scrappers - it's just a shame they do not glaze them as well for me
I was a machinist, lathes, milling machines, borers, surface and rotary grinders, shapers etc. so I am used too working to very high tolerances - the problem is I try for the same tolerances with wood thus it is always very time consuming
I already have a Fox 1 inch morticer that her who must be obeyed got for me a couple of years ago that's never been used - a DeWalt DW 8001 radial arm saw - again never been used since I rebuilt it for something to do more than ten years ago - nice cast iron track - I even purchased 2 Spear and Jackson blades for it a 60 and an 80 tooth - I have a steel router table (make unknown) but she is a beaut I have used (played with) a couple of times
I have a good selection of hand power tools nearly all Makita including - 3 and 4 inch belt sanders - ½ plunging router - palm and pad sanders - biscuit jointer, power plane - Wolf circular saw (whose foot-plate mounting failed the ‘drop-test' about a month ago ) when my Granddaughter decided to go through the shed on her little 50cc quad bike and out into the field rather than go around - I also just purchased from a neighbour a little used Freud FT2000E 1900W router - that I will leave mounted on the table - it's a one spanner job changing the cutter whereas with the Makita it was a pain in the bum a 2-spanner job - it also has a speed control that the Makita does not have
Now the reason I have ‘all of a sudden' taken up a keener interest in woodworking is for ‘health reasons' if I do not get this current project done and dusted reasonably soon the misses is going to murder me -
I started up a tropical marine aquarium - a 4 foot tank in our lounge - after a year or so I had a chance of a nine foot tank - 400 plus gallon - it took ten of us to lift it when it was empty - anyway I decided it should go at the end of ‘her' kitchen -she had a nice fitted kitchen with units all around but to achieve this I had to rip out a 12 foot run and 2 x 5 foot runs of her units - she now has an unfinished island of units in the middle of her kitchen floor - and I have four concrete block walls with four steel girders across them and a sheet and a bit of inch plywood with my tank on - it's been like this for over 12 months - the fish and corals look wonderful - her kitchen looks like the centre of Beirut after a bad days bombing -
This is a reasonably ‘scale' drawing of the tank and support that I have got to box in (done in Corel Draw)
Now what I had originally intended doing was jointing four pieces of one inch ply together and routing out the door/tank positions - then veneering the whole issue - I got some nice American Cherry Wood Veneer for £21 off ebay - 9.82m2 - 21 leaves - 180mm wide - 1.5mm Thick - 2800mm Long - Straight grain/ Quarter cut - Item number: 190154840590
Upon reading up on veneering I have now decided I would perhaps be better off making it from softwood - just using the plywood for the cupboard insides - I have some nice oak doors that would look nice -
Now I think that is plenty for now - there will undoubtedly be some questions soon from me
I was a machinist, lathes, milling machines, borers, surface and rotary grinders, shapers etc. so I am used too working to very high tolerances - the problem is I try for the same tolerances with wood thus it is always very time consuming
I already have a Fox 1 inch morticer that her who must be obeyed got for me a couple of years ago that's never been used - a DeWalt DW 8001 radial arm saw - again never been used since I rebuilt it for something to do more than ten years ago - nice cast iron track - I even purchased 2 Spear and Jackson blades for it a 60 and an 80 tooth - I have a steel router table (make unknown) but she is a beaut I have used (played with) a couple of times
I have a good selection of hand power tools nearly all Makita including - 3 and 4 inch belt sanders - ½ plunging router - palm and pad sanders - biscuit jointer, power plane - Wolf circular saw (whose foot-plate mounting failed the ‘drop-test' about a month ago ) when my Granddaughter decided to go through the shed on her little 50cc quad bike and out into the field rather than go around - I also just purchased from a neighbour a little used Freud FT2000E 1900W router - that I will leave mounted on the table - it's a one spanner job changing the cutter whereas with the Makita it was a pain in the bum a 2-spanner job - it also has a speed control that the Makita does not have
Now the reason I have ‘all of a sudden' taken up a keener interest in woodworking is for ‘health reasons' if I do not get this current project done and dusted reasonably soon the misses is going to murder me -
I started up a tropical marine aquarium - a 4 foot tank in our lounge - after a year or so I had a chance of a nine foot tank - 400 plus gallon - it took ten of us to lift it when it was empty - anyway I decided it should go at the end of ‘her' kitchen -she had a nice fitted kitchen with units all around but to achieve this I had to rip out a 12 foot run and 2 x 5 foot runs of her units - she now has an unfinished island of units in the middle of her kitchen floor - and I have four concrete block walls with four steel girders across them and a sheet and a bit of inch plywood with my tank on - it's been like this for over 12 months - the fish and corals look wonderful - her kitchen looks like the centre of Beirut after a bad days bombing -
This is a reasonably ‘scale' drawing of the tank and support that I have got to box in (done in Corel Draw)
Now what I had originally intended doing was jointing four pieces of one inch ply together and routing out the door/tank positions - then veneering the whole issue - I got some nice American Cherry Wood Veneer for £21 off ebay - 9.82m2 - 21 leaves - 180mm wide - 1.5mm Thick - 2800mm Long - Straight grain/ Quarter cut - Item number: 190154840590
Upon reading up on veneering I have now decided I would perhaps be better off making it from softwood - just using the plywood for the cupboard insides - I have some nice oak doors that would look nice -
Now I think that is plenty for now - there will undoubtedly be some questions soon from me