Getting close to completion with one major tricky job left to do.
I am off work all week due to having a plate removed from my arm yesterday and having a steroid injection into a facet joint today - so I am taking it very slowly but tonight have no back pain for the first time in months - a fantastic feeling
So first today I very gently completed covering up the awful metal brackets on the bottom and I think I am happier with it
You cannot really see it at all when the table is upright which I guess is the acid test.
Then I glued in the small vertical pieces into the gaps between adjacent curved pieces
The vertical pieces also have a slight curve in them to add interest. I debated long and hard with myself about putting an inlay into each of the 6 large curved side pieces but (my wife) decided against it!
So onto my last tricky problem...
I have got this Axi beading router bit to complement the fluting one which I did the legs with.
My original plan was to use the Festool MFS system I have to use as a circular jig to do the outside of the table edge with. So I drilled an 8mm hole in the centre of the MDF and attached the pivot pin underneath the 1000mm MFS piece so that it acted as a trammel arm
Then using the rest of the MFS to balance the router I attached the router and tried it out.
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At the moment the diameter of the circular base is 920 whereas the diameter of the rough sawn table top is about 950 so I have plenty of room to play with to get this right. Eventually it wants to be about 6mm proud all the way round so the beading sticks out from the sides - ie a final diameter of 932
The problem was keeping the router in exactly the same horizontal plane - it kept wandering up by a mm or 2 and therefore the beading looked a mess... so I put a straight bit in and went round the whole table to bring it down to about 935mm - still big enough not to worry too much - yet! You can just about see in this photo where the attempted beading wandered - only a mm or so but enough to make it look awful.
So, I think I have 2 options tomorrow - either mount the beading bit again and repeat but this time go very very carefull and hope like hell it works. Alternatively, and this is my favoured option at present, attach the top to the curved base securely, then use the larger diameter bearing I have attached, and use that bearing against the curved sides to cut the beading. There will be a slight problem as I go over the curved vertical pieces but I could move it round a bit to do them? I guess a third option would be to get the Veritas beading tool. Does anyone have any better ideas or suggestions?
Thanks for looking
Mark