RTC/Cab/Com05
Tuesday, 24 May 2016
Thursday, 25 June 2015
Tea Box Dividers
Dividers are ripped to 60mm and then planned down to fit in dados done on the pin router.
After crosscutting the right length, Shu Feng marks where the joinery will be cut by placing the dividers in the box.
After crosscutting the right length, Shu Feng marks where the joinery will be cut by placing the dividers in the box.
A sled was modified to cut the half lap dado joint with a dado set on the table saw.
Layout lines were transferred up the newly cut kerf of the dadoblades on the sled.
Then layout lines on the dividers are transferred to the edge and lined up on the fence.
A stop block is now set in place.
The divider is flipped onto the stop block for the second cut.
This ensures the dados are symetrical
Tuesday, 16 June 2015
Resaw Jig
Phil re-saws his Maple Dividers to save material
He uses this fancy re-saw jig to track Drift on the band saw.
This jig slips over the rip fence on the band saw |
After Phil found the drift, he paralleled it with the jig and then moved the rip fence to resaw down the middle of his board
Watch Phil re-saw his board perfectly
The perfect Book-match
Mallet Detail on the Lathe
Sonya's Maple Mallet
Watch Sonya Put the finishing touches on her Maple Mallet
After sanding her mallet up to 220 grit,
Sonya uses coat hanger wire to burn dark lines in grooves she made with skew
Sonya then applies wax to the mallet while it is on the lathe and finally burnishes it with its own maple shavings
What a handsome Mallet!
Sonya's mallet is made from laminated maple with pieces of contrasting veneer in between.
Wednesday, 10 June 2015
Tea Box Spline Jig / Video
Watch Ibrahim cut his spline slots with a rip blade and Table Saw jig.
How simple it looks after proper set up
A stop block (not visible from the camera angle) is used to ensure cuts are parallel on all corners
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