A month has gone by.... so much other stuff etc going on so apologies for the delays. Progress slow but I think all remaining major problems are (almost) solvable.
Last time I wrote I had finished the top and bottom of the cabinet and routed a 6mm slot which the tambour will run in
I had to do a tiny repair on the groove in the base when my router slipped very slightly but all turned out OK with a small piece glued in and then cleaned up
I used some dark fairly straight grained unidentifiable hardwood which I had in the workshop to make 130 staves 525 x 16 x 12mm. When this is stained and has the Spanish walnut veneer glued on top it will look fine I think...
For the internal cabinet, I bought a sheet of 12.7mm maple-faced MDF which took forever to arrive but was exactly what I wanted. The grain matches the maple I have to make the corner pieces very closely
The corner pieces of the cabinet were a bit fiddly to make. They are curved internally and
externally to match the curves of the corners of the base so it will look like there is a continuous 12.7mm wide 'wall' going round the rear corners
I bought a beast of a router cutter - a
2-Inch Diameter 2-Flute Carbide Cove Core Box Router Bit - to do the internal corners
For the rear corners, I started with 2 pieces of maple 22 x 44 x 520mm and took corners off two adjacent sides with a 45 degree chamfer bit. By this means I could run the piece along the router table at 45 degrees as below. Taking it very slowly - 1 mm at a time it was fine with the coving bit.
Once this process was complete for both pieces, I removed waste on the outside of both pieces on the planer table with a 45 degree chamfer bit...
.... and then used the new reference face to put 5mm dominoes in the edges to create joints between the curved corner pieces and the maple faced MDF.
Once this was all complete, I finished the outside curves with planes and card scrapers
I dry-assembled the sides and the corners of the cabinet for the first time...
It will sit so there is a 4mm gap between the outside of the cabinet and the groove in the cabinet top and bottom
I've run out of space for photos for this instalment
Cheers Mark