Been working on the windows. I bought some sawn Douglas Fir boards from a local sawmill. Buying rough sawn wood has been a huge learning curve, this is the fourth lot that I've bought and again I've learnt loads, mainly i was just not prepared well enough!
I knew the bloke had boards of the right size and i'd previously worked out the number of boards I wanted, but i couldn't get in contact before the day i had the van and i dropped in unannounced, well i gave them 20mins notice. So on arrival the boards i wanted (8"x2") were buried at the bottom of a very large wood stack and the seller seemed pretty reluctant to dig them out, but i was by this time wood blind, i just wanted some boards! So we started digging at the top, i was smart enough to reject anything with wane, splits, sap wood (although i missed a bit on the back side of one board), but the only boards looking good were 10"x8" and longer than the ones i had worked out my cutting list against.
I was overexcited and did a quick mental calc that I needed 4 boards, turned out I only needed 3, we had also previously agreed a per board price and I mentally calculated a figure and blabbed it out, he bit my hand off, wood blind excitement again! We'd agreed on £20/cuft, later turned out i'd paid £25 as my mental arithmetic was off, so i'd bought more than I needed and paid more than previously agreed! Ho hum.
At 4.2m long the boards were too long to realistically store anywhere under cover, the first job was to workout which components I would cut from which part of the boards. I have previously cut long boards into shorter boards for storage and then regretted it later as I found i cut in just the wrong place! Boards were cut in half(ish) but such that it maximised timber use, and stored in the old shed.
These rough sawn boards have now been processed into the required components: 6 tall stiles @1.8m 2 short stiles @ 1.0m 3 narrow cills and head rails @0.6m and 1 wide cill and head rail @ 1.8m. All stiles and headers were 100mm x 50mm and cills are 150mm x 50mm. I say 50mm thick but from 2" sawn boards the components ended up 43mm thick, I could have kept the shorter components thicker as they had less bow to plane out but i wanted all components a uniform thickness to make construction easier.
Each rough board was straightened on one edge on the surface planer (planer is Wadkin bft 9).
Straight edge boards were then sawn to rough width on the table saw, they were then face planed on the Wadkin and edged at 90°.
Boards were then put through the thicknesser (Dewalt 1150).
Component blanks planed, thicknessed and four square. Shed cleaned ready for the next operation.
The window are 1.8m tall and 60cm wide, non opening, and I'm trying to figure out if I have space to assemble them in the old shed.
Each component has the rebate cut for the glass using the surface planer. Not an operation I enjoy as the cutter guard has to be removed, the machine will rebate to 1/2".
The cills have the rebate cut as per above, then the fence is canted over and the angle for the cill cut using the front cill edge and fence as reference. The first cut is hairy but once the angle is established on the cill the rebating is as per before. A drip edge was sawn on the table saw.
And repeat for all 16 components.
Made two bags of these, going to put on gumtree FTAGH and hope someone will take them away.
I'd made a mock of of the frame with corner bridle joints a while back. Because the frame dimensions are a little different to a traditional bridle joint I wanted to make sure they would work, the frame is strong and has stayed true for a good while so i'm sticking with my plan.
cont next post.