The Whithill scribe cutters can be found
http://www.whitehill-tools.com/catalogu ... =1&c2id=14
Tenoners sound like very interesting machines versatile and fun to use.Would be nice to have one but unaffordable just at the moment.
" A tenoner is a very useful machine, I use mine all of the time. It will definitely help with making the windows, but equally you could do it by hand,"
I need to make a couple of exterior replacement house doors, so moulding strips cut to length and pinned on. I don't think would do because of water ingress.
Uum,ok so to do it by hand, I have some ideas but what hand tools, procedures, hand planes use whatever would I need to familiarize myself with to be able to make my replacement windows and say couple of exterior house doors?
I know a little bit about things like twin tenons being used on 5 inch + door rails,rule of 3rds, haunching, racking- twist and stuff like that. Have various joinery books old and new that cover jointing and other things.
I have 16 inch 3 hp bandsaw fitted with a Kreg precision fence with micro adjust, Draper 1 hp cabinet stand mortiser, Axminster cabinet saw, Metabo, Electa Beckum clone planer thicknesser, floor standing pillar drill, Dewalt 733 thicknesser, floor standing pillar drill various other bits and bobs, dead blow hammer, pipe clamps, other clamps digital protractor, digital height gauge, precision engineers squares, Veritas precision straight edge. Also have the Axminster Rider shoulder plane,The Rider No 5 jack plane and Rider block plane. Oh and also the workbench I 'm still in the process of getting organised to make.The spindle is currently mothballed and off limits until I'm sure I know how to use safely and properly.
I have a universal size adjustable size bobbin sander for the pillar drill. Though have been toying with the idea of getting one of those around 100 quid oscillating bobbins. I think if need that option can make do with the pillar drill.
I'm afraid my woodworking is a bit all over the place, sort of buying a machine here, buying a machine there, learning about a technique here and another one there
I'm hoping people will be kind enough to help fill in the gaps and make some things less esoteric and more coherent. I have tried goggling joinery terms so I could more clearly try to understand some of the joinery terms used but still many of the terms I don't understand. It took me ages to get an idea of what the English equivalent of American sticking and cope were and grasp it.
Peter.