DD

"Dr. Deb"

26/06/2012 5:52 AM

Latest Project


I just posted pictures of my latest project over on
alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking.


Chris Schwarz of Popular Woodworking says that everytime he builds a
workbench, it occupies his every waking moment. I found him to be correct
but there is that certain satisfaction. It isn't perfect, but not bad for
the first attempt. The wood is Southern Red Oak(which I thought was drier
than it was), the finish is three coats of a 50/50 mix of boiled lindseed
oil and mineral spirits, the screw for the chop is a 1" Acme Lead Screw from
The Surplus Center (with two flanged bearings, the one on the chop serving
as the garter and the nut held in a block on the backside of the leg), the
weight is in the neighborhood of 350 pounds.

Deb


This topic has 2 replies

Sc

Sonny

in reply to "Dr. Deb" on 26/06/2012 5:52 AM

26/06/2012 4:33 AM

Looks great. Good job.

My latest project, finished yesterday, is a back door for the work
room at the back of the garage. For 2 years I had been wanting to
replace the old original door, which had some wear, loose joints and
began dragging the floor. http://www.flickr.com/photos/43836144@N04/7447111346/in/photostream
Will install it today.

Sonny

Rc

Robatoy

in reply to "Dr. Deb" on 26/06/2012 5:52 AM

27/06/2012 12:49 AM

On Jun 26, 6:52=A0am, "Dr. Deb" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I just posted pictures of my latest project over on
> alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking.
>
> Chris Schwarz of Popular Woodworking says that everytime he builds a
> workbench, it occupies his every waking moment. =A0I found him to be corr=
ect
> but there is that certain satisfaction. =A0It isn't perfect, but not bad =
for
> the first attempt. =A0The wood is Southern Red Oak(which I thought was dr=
ier
> than it was), the finish is three coats of a 50/50 mix of boiled lindseed
> oil and mineral spirits, the screw for the chop is a 1" Acme Lead Screw f=
rom
> The Surplus Center (with two flanged bearings, the one on the chop servin=
g
> as the garter and the nut held in a block on the backside of the leg), th=
e
> weight is in the neighborhood of 350 pounds.
>
> Deb

I took a look at that and it amazed me to see what some people can
cobble together out of a hundred bucks worth of wood. (joke)
Very nice job with some clever aids built in.
May it help you in making beautiful wood things in the many years to
come.


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