Chris Knight
Established Member
I have finally finished the laminating work for the rockers and back braces and have commenced on some things that are more interesting than watching glue dry. This page follows the one where I left things, last time. http://chrisknight.info/woodwork/rockin ... hair_5.htm
The jointing is getting interesting, I am having to cut what seems like nearly everything at an angle other than 90 degrees - mostly 84 degrees. I guess it shows that my 3D sense is no good but it is giving me quite a headache as I try to envisage how the joint I am cutting is going to mate with an existing piece. I sometimes get a bit panicky in the middle of a cut and ask myself if the cut I am making is the right one, or should I have measured the angle as a mirror image?
I have been stretching the use of my TS 2000 to the limits to emulate Hal Taylor's 10 inch unisaw. In the process I have discovered that I can do nearly everything I need to on my smaller saw but I am nonetheless going to look for a bigger one! One thing that really caught me by surprise was to find that there are circumstances where a sliding table is not as useful as the Murricans' ubiquitous crosscut sled. I had to build a crosscut sled to accomplish one particular joint!
I will have made so many jigs by the time I finish this chair, I shall definitely have to make a few more chairs to justify all the jigs.
The jointing is getting interesting, I am having to cut what seems like nearly everything at an angle other than 90 degrees - mostly 84 degrees. I guess it shows that my 3D sense is no good but it is giving me quite a headache as I try to envisage how the joint I am cutting is going to mate with an existing piece. I sometimes get a bit panicky in the middle of a cut and ask myself if the cut I am making is the right one, or should I have measured the angle as a mirror image?
I have been stretching the use of my TS 2000 to the limits to emulate Hal Taylor's 10 inch unisaw. In the process I have discovered that I can do nearly everything I need to on my smaller saw but I am nonetheless going to look for a bigger one! One thing that really caught me by surprise was to find that there are circumstances where a sliding table is not as useful as the Murricans' ubiquitous crosscut sled. I had to build a crosscut sled to accomplish one particular joint!
I will have made so many jigs by the time I finish this chair, I shall definitely have to make a few more chairs to justify all the jigs.