A
Anonymous
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Shultzy":d0oc6y0l said:Great looking bench, can't wait till I start mine.
Just a few questions
Thansk Stefan - happy to answer any questions
To stop the work racking and jamming when cutting the shoulders - if you run against the fence AND the mitre gauge, there is a real risk of kickback or non-alignment of cuts. The wood leaves the extra ali before touching the blade. This is standard practice.What was the extra alu fence on your saw for when you were cutting the tenons.
Did you band saw from both sides or just face side.
Just the face sides - I turned wood over and kept fence in same position for all cuts. I prefer to cut the faces slightly over size and then fine tune with a plane - this is quick and takes slight variations in mortise width into account.
When you cut the tenons at 5 degrees, what thickness did you leave at the bottom.
More-or-less nothing. I drew a line with my square all around the wood and in line with the ends of the basic mortise. I then set my bevel gauge to 5 degrees and drew a line up the side of the wood from level with the end of the mortise at the bottom (used previous line as reference). I used the square again to extend this new line across the top face and clamped my guide block against this line.
When I chopped the mortise to 5 degrees, I held the chisel very tightly against the block (fingers on back of blade and hand at back of block) and the chisel emerged just about in line with the bottom mortise ends (within a mm).
I don't understand the phrase "sprung the joints with a 0.5mm dip in the middle" - can you explain
OK. Wood tends to shrink more at the ends than along the main pieces of a plank over time - this is due to the end grain taking in or giving up moisture more rapidly than the main faces and is why boards often have the ends painted when one buys them.
What I did was plane the edges dead straight from end to end, then started a plane cut about 6" in from the end and stopped it about 6" from the other. A few passes causes the boards to have a slight 'dip' in the middle (length of plane really determines the depth as it stops cutting pretty soon - called a 'stop shaving' by DC).
When I glued up the boards, the clamps closed them together and the ends are under compressive strain, thus if the ends do shrink a bit as the wood continues to dry out, the joint won't open up.
Is the "boiled linseed" bought as is or do you make it yourself.
Rustins - £2.99 per bottle. You can see the bottle in some photos
No problem at all - I hope I have clarified, if not, then feel free to pm me and we can discuss furtherSorry about all the question, only way to learn