After my recent trip to a wood supplier in Stafford I acquired a large piece of Sequoia
After assessing it I ran my circular saw across it to separate the piece into a top section and a longer narrow piece that would form the waterfall leg and leave around an 800 mm length for another traditional table.
After this I milled the slabs flat and filled the cracks around the knots with acrylic.
Yesterday I went over to a friends workshop ….him & his dad run a fitted bedroom business, and trimmed off some of the poorer edges and created the 45 deg cuts for the waterfall. Kieron has a fantastic sliding carriage table saw which made easy work if the joint.
This morning I set about the top section with my beast of belt sander (Wolfcraft) levelling off the acrylic and working down to 240 grit prior to a wipe over with my tung oil/varnish/white spirit mix.
Looks good but the sequoia does show sanding marks easily…..lots more sanding to do to remove the ones revealed by the quick wipe over.
After assessing it I ran my circular saw across it to separate the piece into a top section and a longer narrow piece that would form the waterfall leg and leave around an 800 mm length for another traditional table.
After this I milled the slabs flat and filled the cracks around the knots with acrylic.
Yesterday I went over to a friends workshop ….him & his dad run a fitted bedroom business, and trimmed off some of the poorer edges and created the 45 deg cuts for the waterfall. Kieron has a fantastic sliding carriage table saw which made easy work if the joint.
This morning I set about the top section with my beast of belt sander (Wolfcraft) levelling off the acrylic and working down to 240 grit prior to a wipe over with my tung oil/varnish/white spirit mix.
Looks good but the sequoia does show sanding marks easily…..lots more sanding to do to remove the ones revealed by the quick wipe over.