CHJ":1wkgs19w said:Neither does the fact that I 'do it my way' as opposed to the approved? method, as long as it's worked safely and finished well nobody but me is any the wiser when it's left the shed.
ChazI am old enough to have had the benefit of seeing some real craftsmen producing outstanding work in facilities with no electricity and self made tools
Not quite that basic Steve, old and thrifty on the equipment re-cycling front I may be, but long enough in the tooth not to have too many masochistic tendencies left.farmerboyce":pj9gor86 said:....please don`t tell me that you are are turning out these pieces on a pole lathe, and, if memory serves, in an odd hour here and there, :mrgreen: :mrgreen:
Steve....
Yes, but that`s part of the fun! :lol:when they get a piece of wood they wonder what they can make from it.
Guess not, although that one and all the other smaller ones we used for pumping water etc. were in Worcestershire.Jonzjob":4rbg5gm7 said:That Lister engine didn't have a lot of distance to cover from the maker did it Chas!!
bignomis":17gxw3fj said:......One thing in particular I would like to know and that is what glue do you use for glueing together components such as the individual blocks in your laminated swirl box? ......
Hi ChasVery difficult to do by hand in solid wood if you want close joints, would be far more practical and a more stable job done with veneered MDF.
It would be virtually impossible to achieve the concave surface required with a standard spindle sander, no control of the precise radius and the drum would be too flexible.
That's the only way I have come up with so far. I'm working on an alternate
jig method but jigs tend to be rather restricting on component size.
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