luthier49
Established Member
I`ve started work on a long case clock I`ve been meaning to build for about ten years now. The case is to replace a clock I made some twenty five years ago when I was just starting out in this woodworking hobby of ours. Although I made a fairly good job of making the clock, I made a lot of no no`s as regards the construction methods. One being the glueing of oppossing grain, eg. gluing the large base and hood mouldings completely across the waist boards of the clock, therefore restricting any nateral movement across the boards. The poor clock has creaked and groaned over the years and some of the butt jointed boards have opened up. Of coarse this was due to a lack of knowledge at the time. Well here goes, although I`m working from the original plans I used to build the clock, it still feels like I`m making it from scratch again. Here`s a photo of the plans.
Here`s the new dial for the clock. I had to draw some new parts of the clock as the new dial is slightly smaller than the original home made dial I made.
Here is my setup for overhead routing of the large base and hood mouldings. I have the Router Rack that used to be available from Trend but no longer available. Anyone else got this gear? I made a tilting cradle for the first stage of routing the moulding.
Here are the router cutters used i the making of the mouldings. Purchased from Wealdon.
The first stage of routing complete.
Here are the finished mouldings. I had to use a cutter extension in the router to rout the thumbnail profile. I ran the router at 12000 revs using these larger cutters. This is one of my hates when doing this kind of job, the dust and chips this operation produces. I did have some dust extraction, but it was`nt very effective, I spent three times as long cleaning the workshop up after. Oh for a New Yankee Workshop sized workshop. And the machinery. The two pieces with the knots/ingrown bark will be mostly cut away when the mouldings are mitred round the clock waist.
Here`s the new dial for the clock. I had to draw some new parts of the clock as the new dial is slightly smaller than the original home made dial I made.
Here is my setup for overhead routing of the large base and hood mouldings. I have the Router Rack that used to be available from Trend but no longer available. Anyone else got this gear? I made a tilting cradle for the first stage of routing the moulding.
Here are the router cutters used i the making of the mouldings. Purchased from Wealdon.
The first stage of routing complete.
Here are the finished mouldings. I had to use a cutter extension in the router to rout the thumbnail profile. I ran the router at 12000 revs using these larger cutters. This is one of my hates when doing this kind of job, the dust and chips this operation produces. I did have some dust extraction, but it was`nt very effective, I spent three times as long cleaning the workshop up after. Oh for a New Yankee Workshop sized workshop. And the machinery. The two pieces with the knots/ingrown bark will be mostly cut away when the mouldings are mitred round the clock waist.