johnnyb
Established Member
he was harsh on the lovely tommy as well!
Can't remember that - maybe I just do it without thinking?he was harsh on the lovely tommy as well!
He should have presented himself as the amateur he is - no shame in that!My bold.
I think you are being unduly harsh on the man. He may be doing it that way because he's making a video and being directed by a photographer.
Not much to say - he was a big cheerful good natured bloke just like his TV personality. Also very practical, obviously, and quick to pick up ideas.could you tell us any stories about that episode Mr b? what was tommy like? it was in a peak cottage but not the episode about sash windows.
Not for me.Perhaps it's a good time for you to produce a set of videos or write a detailed thread with illustrations teaching us all how to do it the right way.
Do I detect a hint of sarcasm here?I see, I'm disappointed that you have turned down the opportunity of presenting your extensive knowledge, because I was looking forward to the learning experience.
Mildly, but I do like learning from people and I thought that you would be willing to share your knowledge with those who are willing to learn.Do I detect a hint of sarcasm here?
Drop by if you are up this way - happy to show you the process. I've got bits of old rods lying about still. Sometimes keep them - on MFC they are easy to erase and use the board again
Happy too. I thought I was doing anyway?.... I thought that you would be willing to share your knowledge with those who are willing to learn.
It's a problem for modern woodworkers - some extremely efficient trad methods seem to have been forgotten - marking up from a rod (not a "story stick") is a big one but biggest of all is sharpening, which has been more or less reinvented!
The existence of special tools can be misleading too, most of the work being done with a few ordinary bench tools.
That's sorely lacking in detail and is just a basic outline of the procedure for constructing a window, which any amateur would know anyway.The basic procedure.
Whether it's one sash or a whole set you do them in one batch, which may mean a lot of components, hundreds even, so your cutting list has to be efficient. Handy to have it on a black/white board on the wall so you can see it from wherever you are, and cross reference with whatever pieces of wood are in front of you as the job goes on.
1 Do design drawings for the thing, based on dimensions taken from window openings, room size, whatever it is
2 Draw up a rod i.e. the final working drawing, transferred to a board, usually just cross sections, though an arch etc might need a rod of the elevation on a sheet of ply
Edit. The very first things you mark on the rods are the heights and widths of the opening the thing is going in to. You then work everything from those marks, so they have to be right
3 Work out a cutting list from the rod.
4 Order glass cut, to sizes from the rod, or large sheets to cut it yourself, which I usually do.
5 Cut up sawn stock, according to the cutting list, working from largest sizes/sections/lengths downwards - cut from the smallest pieces of stock available. This is basic stock control and is least wasteful. If you do short pieces too soon you may find you haven't enough long pieces left when you get around to them
All glazing bars treated as through, to be separated later as necessary. You could do all sash boxes as one batch and sashes themselves as another, as long as you are working them from the same rod, but it's handy to get all the planing to size done for everything, in one long session
6 Plane up the sawn components individually, marking all with face and edge marks.
n.b You don’t plane “stock” first, you cut it to size first, with due allowances for planing, and then plane.
7 Start the marking up procedure by stacking components on the rod with edge marks opposite so that you get left/right pieces. Mark one side. This is just a routine even if they aren’t handed - just in case. Stack just a convenient height for marking with a set square. Tick them off the cutting list as you go.
8 Carry marks all round with a pencil.
Mark along the lengths with marking gauges and mortice gauge.
Mark for everything. On a door you can mark up for hinges and hardware. On a sash you can mark for pulleys and pockets etc. You have to decide where these things are going so you might as well mark them on the rod too, rather than thinking of them later.
9 Cut all mortices with bevels for wedges, and tenon cheeks and haunches only - not shoulders yet. Everything is still in the square at this point so rebates and mouldings easy to run. It's handy to work to the lines you've marked up as soon as possible, as they are going to be lost as the work progresses
10 Cut all rebates and mouldings
Going out now - more later!
It's not the methods - the design and details first. Methods are secondary. Best source of design and details is the old joinery you are hoping to replace.I am trying to work out what these trad methods are because I think there’s value in them, historically and culturally, and I think they produce a more refined and more beautiful result.
Well you'll just have to wait! It's quite a job getting the information together and I've got other stuff to do....
I would have expected more clarity and greater detail from an expert who is happy to criticise the work of others.
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