phil.p":15622rtj said:The hole was a little close to the end, though.
katellwood":4xsj3w8z said:if you have others, drill then glue some dowels either side of the end hole.
this will strengthen the grain
Wend":yy2ksq6w said:phil.p":yy2ksq6w said:The hole was a little close to the end, though.
Oh, I assumed you were meant to put it close enough to the end that you could spin the handle freely, rather than having to keep sliding the bar back and forth through the hole.
100%Beau":ury18wxb said:Wend":ury18wxb said:phil.p":ury18wxb said:The hole was a little close to the end, though.
Oh, I assumed you were meant to put it close enough to the end that you could spin the handle freely, rather than having to keep sliding the bar back and forth through the hole.
Yes you need it that close to end or you cant use all the thread.
Pretty rubbish piece of softwood though so you cant expect too much of it.
Bodgers":3sk1ojop said:Ash or similar has to be the way to go.
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Beau":2kqjnshc said:Mine are Iroko as it's what I had at the time.
Woody2Shoes":1ln2clb6 said:My 2 d's-worth:
I think that - as was said early on - the hole was a bit near the end. I think that another key reason for that failure was the wonky grain around that knot - you could well have got away with it if the knot hadn't been there, with nice straight grain instead. There's nothing intrinsically wrong with softwood for this job - you just need to select it (and where you drill it!) with some care.
Cheers, W2S
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