Blow the cobwebs off this...
The top has been leaning up in my dining room ever since this started. I didn't realise it has been so long!
I'm still keen to attempt my original design idea, and I've worked out how I can do it. But it requires a VERY particular board for the pillars and as yet I've not found it.
So I have decided, as an interim measure, to make a bog standard four-legs-and-aprons understructure, pine, painted something like National Trust green. Nothing fancy, just slightly tapered legs, that's it. The tapers are on the inside faces only. Tapering the outside can make the table look somewhat pigeon-toed.
So this week I bought some 3" unsorted redwood and prepped it up. The mortices are best cut while the legs are still in the square:
I might cut in a shallow bit for the haunch, but the tenon itself is quite wide, so I don't think it will be necessary, I think I'd rather maintain the integrity of the endgrain, TBH.
The taper starts 110mm below the top and goes from 60mm down to 42mm at the toe:
I'm cutting the tapers on the bandsaw, and as you might expect, I'm making a little jig. OK, for a one-off, I could easily just cut them freehand, but I have a reputation to uphold...
I stole the L-shaped extension piece I sometimes use on my SCMS when I run out of fence length andscrewed that down to piece of scrap OSB:
So now I simply put my workpiece against the L and saw away. The first cut is always wth one inside face down on the bed of the jig and the other inside face outwards. That way the workpiece is always properly seated.
So I run the whole lot through the bandsaw:
Then rotate it for the other inside face. The result is this:
And after a swift pass on the planer:
So simple it's hardly worth writing up, really. But it needs recording, as one never knows when one's clogs are going to get popped.