throbscottle
Established Member
I thought pitch pine was extinct? (all cut down for railway sleepers and telegraph poles)
i think its finished as a commercially grown timber - but lots to be reclaimed. the stuff I'm using is from some old school lockers that I rescued from a skip - all freeI thought pitch pine was extinct? (all cut down for railway sleepers and telegraph poles)
I've an ancient tamper the head of which has always been a little loose. It had become extremely loose a couple of years ago when I went to use it so just put it into a bucket of water for a day or two. Nice and tight! It has now become as loose as it has always been so the bucket trick does last a few years.until it dries again
if the bucket had a diluted PVA in it (6:1 , 10:1) I wonder if the wood would shrink back as muchI've an ancient tamper the head of which has always been a little loose. It had become extremely loose a couple of years ago when I went to use it so just put it into a bucket of water for a day or two. Nice and tight! It has now become as loose as it has always been so the bucket trick does last a few years.
Have fun
Martin
They are very cheap and there are tons available 2nd hand. Why struggle away without basic tools?.... Personally I don't have a decent chisel ....
Either coping saw then chisels to scribe it in, which will be pretty difficult in this instance to achieve great results, (or bandsaw which would probably be fine if you trust yourself and do some relief cuts first) or I would probably prefer to offer it up to the mating piece, scribe it on with a marking knife, then use whatever method to hand to make a rectangular pocket for the shoulder. For example router and jig, chisels and router plane, or this plus chain drilling to remove the bulk.May as well ask while I'm here. I have three of these legs to fit onto a 100mm Ø main leg.
Obviously I am going to have to get a nice fit for the rounded edge so will have to faff for ages with chisel and sandpaper - is there n easy way - any thoughts would be most appreciated, I have done them before and its a pain in the buttocks sort of task
View attachment 186984
Forgot to mention, if I was doing the first method I would likely offer up the leg for fit and scribe the shoulder off the circular centre piece tooEither coping saw then chisels to scribe it in, which will be pretty difficult in this instance to achieve great results, (or bandsaw which would probably be fine if you trust yourself and do some relief cuts first) or I would probably prefer to offer it up to the mating piece, scribe it on with a marking knife, then use whatever method to hand to make a rectangular pocket for the shoulder. For example router and jig, chisels and router plane, or this plus chain drilling to remove the bulk.
I would probably choose router and jig, making the jig by trapping 4 bits of mdf around the leg, mitre bonding or just taping them together well, then use that new shape to make a little solid jig.
You could then faff around with wedges and clamping solution to get it sitting plane to the circular centre bit ? Or even trace the centre onto paper, and make a very quick rod for wedge size and positioning into the jig.
That would be fantastic to dovetail them in, master cabinet maker skill set a must! I could probably do one, but unable to adjust the angle (and I doubt you could with a dovetail on the other end from the shoulder) then I just would not have that skill levelHow are they held in? Chubber suggested an excellent method in post #10. I've never cut a dovetail myself but surely it's worth the effort!
I feel for you on those tiny angle errors though. Ouch.
I would use the dreaded Epoxy...Thoughts on what glue to use. The tenons have been in an out that many times they are a little slack (just tight enough to stay in place without any weight, but you could knock them out with a feather)
Do I
1. Just use PVA
2. that polyurathane expanding gorilla glue stuff
3. put a screw hole through them so as they widen and become tight when a screw is inserted, this would allow me to use PVA and get a nice tight fit (the screw would never be seen)
PVA is water based so does tend to make wood swell. Try lightly wetting the joints and see if that uncompresses the fibres getting your joint nice and snug again. If it does then continue with the normal wood glue.Thoughts on what glue to use. The tenons have been in an out that many times they are a little slack (just tight enough to stay in place without any weight, but you could knock them out with a feather)
Do I
1. Just use PVA
2. that polyurathane expanding gorilla glue stuff
3. put a screw hole through them so as they widen and become tight when a screw is inserted, this would allow me to use PVA and get a nice tight fit (the screw would never be seen)
as in just dampen them, leave them overnight to dry out then see if they are tight again?PVA is water based so does tend to make wood swell. Try lightly wetting the joints and see if that uncompresses the fibres getting your joint nice and snug again. If it does then continue with the normal wood glue.
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