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A cabinet, the customer couldn't buy one off the shelf that was the right size, the design is to match some other cabinets they have.

Made out of cardboard as usual, customer going to paint it.

Apologies, the workshop is an absolute tip and the photos are terrible!

mdf cabinet 1.jpg


mdf cabinet 2.jpg


Used some actual real wood for the legs!

mdf cabinet 3.jpg


It's kind of fitted and freestanding at the same time if you know what I mean :unsure:

mdf cabinet 5.jpg
 
Finished this off this week to solve my issue of putting my glass/mug on the floor while I watch TV.
Form and function. two of the guiding principles of design.

LOUD VOICE - THIS IS NOT MY TABLE - UNFORTUNATELY
You dont always need to follow convention.
Elli-Design-_-Table-Achille-Noce-Canaletto-_-Wood-_-3d-printed-_-Cover.jpg

Elli design. Achille table -
 
got a new tablesaw , the saw itself is powerful and quiet, but the supplied fence is rubbish, after trying to tweak it for several hours ive decided its just not up to the job, it wont keep square and shifts considerably when you lock it, axminsters fence extrusion is a ridiculous profile and why they didnt stick with a square section is beyond me.the fence extrusion isnt even square! any way ive scrapped it and fitted a new saw fence from rutlands that locks down front and back it slides in 2 tracks and fitting was tricky because i wanted the whole fence to swing out of the way when not in use. my shop is small and im waiting delivery of a planer thicknesser, the fence rails extend well past the saw and would interfere with operator space if they were fixed. after lots of headscratching i attached hinges bolted to a rail on the left side of the saw, the existing threaded holes came in useful to attach hard stops, i only had to drill 2 holes in the cabinet to bolt on a hard stop. quite pleased with the result, its flat square parralel and rock solid, just have to extend the table on the right side with some half inch birch ply. i wanted to be able to cut 2 foot on the right of the blade. it all looks a bit heath robinson but im not concerned as long as it works as intended, used thick plastic around the wear areas as the extrusion is aliminium and i dont want wear .
 

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I must be completely mad. Sash moulding plane modular mother plane system coming along. The plane on the bottom will cut a basic sash profile and plane to the right will cut an ovolo profile into it. Idea is I can make an ogee/astragal profile plane or whatever and then be the proud owner of limitless sash moulding planes. (Why?!!)

IMG_4364.jpeg

IMG_4365.jpeg
 
I must be completely mad. Sash moulding plane modular mother plane system coming along. The plane on the bottom will cut a basic sash profile and plane to the right will cut an ovolo profile into it. Idea is I can make an ogee/astragal profile plane or whatever and then be the proud owner of limitless sash moulding planes. (Why?!!)

View attachment 168202
View attachment 168203
Nice!
Do you grind your own cutters or buy in??
 
Nice!
Do you grind your own cutters or buy in??
I’ve been making my own. Funnily enough, that’s what I was doing today. I may as well explain how, because absolutely nobody knows that I do all this stuff. My wife just thinks I am “down the Shed”

Start with a sheet of 1/8 inch 01 tool steel. Blue and mark up.

IMG_4366.jpeg


Then I have this little horizontal milling machine that I bought as a wreck on eBay and refurbished. I effectively use it as a metal table saw it does perfectly straight cut with a good finish, and also allows me to dial in the measurement I need to 1000th of an inch.



After a bit of deburring and touching up, it looks like this.

IMG_4370.jpeg


But then it needs to be tapered in thickness from 1/16” to 1/8”. To do that I have this old Eagle surface grinder, again, bought on eBay as a wreck and extensively refurbished.

IMG_4372.jpeg


I can’t really hold the camera and operate it at the same time, but here is me trying to do that.



You can see the taper in this picture

IMG_4375.jpeg


So now we have a good quality, accurate, moulding plane iron. A bit of a palaver, but now I have the gear, I knock them out pretty quickly.

Here is the iron in the new plane

IMG_4378.jpeg
IMG_4376.jpeg
 
I’ve been making my own. Funnily enough, that’s what I was doing today. I may as well explain how, because absolutely nobody knows that I do all this stuff. My wife just thinks I am “down the Shed”

Start with a sheet of 1/8 inch 01 tool steel. Blue and mark up.

View attachment 168211

Then I have this little horizontal milling machine that I bought as a wreck on eBay and refurbished. I effectively use it as a metal table saw it does perfectly straight cut with a good finish, and also allows me to dial in the measurement I need to 1000th of an inch.

View attachment 168212

After a bit of deburring and touching up, it looks like this.

View attachment 168213

But then it needs to be tapered in thickness from 1/16” to 1/8”. To do that I have this old Eagle surface grinder, again, bought on eBay as a wreck and extensively refurbished.

View attachment 168214

I can’t really hold the camera and operate it at the same time, but here is me trying to do that.

View attachment 168215

You can see the taper in this picture

View attachment 168216

So now we have a good quality, accurate, moulding plane iron. A bit of a palaver, but now I have the gear, I knock them out pretty quickly.

Here is the iron in the new plane

View attachment 168217View attachment 168218
No one has checked and approved your drawings!🤔🤣🤔🤣
 
I’ve been making my own. Funnily enough, that’s what I was doing today. I may as well explain how, because absolutely nobody knows that I do all this stuff. My wife just thinks I am “down the Shed”

Start with a sheet of 1/8 inch 01 tool steel. Blue and mark up.

View attachment 168211

Then I have this little horizontal milling machine that I bought as a wreck on eBay and refurbished. I effectively use it as a metal table saw it does perfectly straight cut with a good finish, and also allows me to dial in the measurement I need to 1000th of an inch.

View attachment 168212

After a bit of deburring and touching up, it looks like this.

View attachment 168213

But then it needs to be tapered in thickness from 1/16” to 1/8”. To do that I have this old Eagle surface grinder, again, bought on eBay as a wreck and extensively refurbished.

View attachment 168214

I can’t really hold the camera and operate it at the same time, but here is me trying to do that.

View attachment 168215

You can see the taper in this picture

View attachment 168216

So now we have a good quality, accurate, moulding plane iron. A bit of a palaver, but now I have the gear, I knock them out pretty quickly.

Here is the iron in the new plane

View attachment 168217View attachment 168218
That’s bloomin’ marvellous, love those old tools.
 
Basically finished my mother plane today. Tomorrow morning, it will have a fence screwed on it, and then it’s a question of hardening the iron, tuning it up, and getting it to work well.

I’m quite pleased with that, everyone of these I do, seems to be a level better than the last. Not perfect, but really coming along.

IMG_4382.jpeg
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