I'm hoping this is a good location to find a bit of information. I'm
looking for a location where I can purchase smooth wooden circles, 3
1/2 inches in diameter, and 1 inch high. Higher quality wood is
preferred, walnut, oak,mahogany, etc...
I need a lot of these. My biggest problem is locating anyone that deals
with wood in this size. Any ideas on where I can go for something like
this?
Thanks,
"Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Leuf (in [email protected]) said:
>
> | I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7.5/day. You're invited to e-mail
> | Morris. ;)
>
> Oh come on now, you're not really trying. I'm pretty sure you could do
> better than that using just one hand. <g>
>
> I cheat: I'd cut them using /no/ hands! :-D
>
Now if you can just find somebody who needs a bunch of wooden holes.....
First off,
Thanks to everyone who has replied. I'm not a woodmaker? myself, and
actually couldn't tell you much about wood. (Gave up at 12 when I
chopped part of my thumb off when whittling).
Anyways, I'll definitely be contacting Mr. Dovey to talk about the
specs I need, since our orders will range from 1 to 5 thousand and need
quick turnaround times.
Thank you all for your advice here, as it has me looking into a couple
options for this project.
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 14:07:50 -0600, "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>gw (in [email protected]) said:
>
>| "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>| news:[email protected]...
>|| Leuf (in [email protected]) said:
>||
>||| I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7.5/day. You're invited to
>||| e-mail Morris. ;)
>||
>|| Oh come on now, you're not really trying. I'm pretty sure you
>|| could do better than that using just one hand. <g>
>||
>|| I cheat: I'd cut them using /no/ hands! :-D
>|
>| Now if you can just find somebody who needs a bunch of wooden
>| holes.....
>
>I've already set up a cutting strategy - almost all of the scraps
>would be smallish triangles. Just for fun I'll post the sketch on
>ABPW...
Saw that, how does one identify the tool start location?
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
If you're gonna be dumb, you better be tough
+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
[email protected] wrote:
> I'm hoping this is a good location to find a bit of information. I'm
> looking for a location where I can purchase smooth wooden circles, 3
> 1/2 inches in diameter, and 1 inch high. Higher quality wood is
> preferred, walnut, oak,mahogany, etc...
> I need a lot of these. My biggest problem is locating anyone that deals
> with wood in this size. Any ideas on where I can go for something like
> this?
>
> Thanks,
>
You mean like wooden hockey pucks?
A small woodshop with a lathe and tablesaw could make these. How many
is 'alot'?
Post your location and some enterprising reader might contact you,
providing you are willing to pay a reasonable amount.
[email protected] (in
[email protected]) said:
| I'm hoping this is a good location to find a bit of information. I'm
| looking for a location where I can purchase smooth wooden circles, 3
| 1/2 inches in diameter, and 1 inch high. Higher quality wood is
| preferred, walnut, oak,mahogany, etc...
| I need a lot of these. My biggest problem is locating anyone that
| deals with wood in this size. Any ideas on where I can go for
| something like this?
I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7500/day. You're invited to e-mail
me.
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html
Mark & Juanita (in [email protected]) said:
| On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 14:07:50 -0600, "Morris Dovey"
| <[email protected]> wrote:
|
|| I've already set up a cutting strategy - almost all of the scraps
|| would be smallish triangles. Just for fun I'll post the sketch on
|| ABPW...
|
| Saw that, how does one identify the tool start location?
You're ahead of the process. This was just an attempt to map parts
onto a workspace for cutting with a 1/4" bit. Using a 1/4" bit would
require two passes - and if it turned out that schedule were more
important than cost, I'd end up re-making the map for a 1/2" bit which
would allow cutting all parts with a single pass.
Probably the easiest place to start (regardless of bit size) would be
at the nine o'clock position on the leftmost circle of the topmost (or
only) row. It's possible to continuously climb-cut a row at a time so
that the only overhead movement is from the start/end point of one row
to the start/end point of the next row.
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 13:26:08 -0600, "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Leuf (in [email protected]) said:
>
>| I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7.5/day. You're invited to e-mail
>| Morris. ;)
>
>Oh come on now, you're not really trying. I'm pretty sure you could do
>better than that using just one hand. <g>
Well I figure 100 in a day, and then 2 weeks trying to avoid seeing
anything round while working up the will to do it again... but the
way my latest project has been going I'd do it just to avoid having to
look at the darn thing. Now that I've fixed the screw up from the fix
for the screw up of the original screw up it should be smooth sailing
though. Yeah right. I'm not sure how I'll manage to screw up
attaching the top and making one drawer, but I'm sure I'll manage it.
Then there's drilling pilot holes where there aint no room to get a
drill. Some good potential for ruining the whole thing right there.
Yep, tomorrow is going to be great.
-Leuf
On Wed, 11 Jan 2006 01:27:41 -0600, "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7500/day. You're invited to e-mail
>me.
I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7.5/day. You're invited to e-mail
Morris. ;)
-Leuf
Leuf (in [email protected]) said:
| I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7.5/day. You're invited to e-mail
| Morris. ;)
Oh come on now, you're not really trying. I'm pretty sure you could do
better than that using just one hand. <g>
I cheat: I'd cut them using /no/ hands! :-D
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html
gw (in [email protected]) said:
| "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote in message
| news:[email protected]...
|| Leuf (in [email protected]) said:
||
||| I can cut 'em at a rate of about 7.5/day. You're invited to
||| e-mail Morris. ;)
||
|| Oh come on now, you're not really trying. I'm pretty sure you
|| could do better than that using just one hand. <g>
||
|| I cheat: I'd cut them using /no/ hands! :-D
|
| Now if you can just find somebody who needs a bunch of wooden
| holes.....
I've already set up a cutting strategy - almost all of the scraps
would be smallish triangles. Just for fun I'll post the sketch on
ABPW...
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html
Rick M (in [email protected]) said:
| "Morris Dovey" wrote> I've already set up a cutting strategy -
| almost all of the scraps
|| would be smallish triangles. Just for fun I'll post the sketch on
|| ABPW...
|
| [snip]
|
| You using the same kerf twice? Ahhhh you're using your vacuum
| holddowns. That's fair!
Actually, I'm not using the same kerf twice; and I thought I might use
double-sided tape to secure the workpiece and keep cut parts under
control.
I could use the vacuum pucks if I didn't cut all the way through the
stock - but then I'd need to separate the circles and do a manual
clean up on each one. Sometimes it just works better to use the
double-sided tape to stick the workpiece to the table.
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html