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Harry Potter on Ice posted:Oh um that's further than I planned and apparently I'm using the wrong language. I just bought a huge jug of this dalys stuff so it's what I use for everything working 200-400 wet sanding (which apparently I maybe dont want to do because I can burnish the wood easily) and this is the first time I've put anything on maple. From what I briefly read online people said maple can turn out blotchy if you dont condition it, I didn't realize that was a thinned coat I thought it was a different liquid like uh... a shampoo conditioner thing haha Maple and cherry (alder too I think?) have wild grain in them sometimes that absorbs stains/dyes differently from the rest of the wood and can make them blotchy. A conditioner blocks up some of those pores in the woods and makes the stain apply more evenly and give a more consistent color. Some people call it blotchy and think it’s a defect, some people call it figure and go wild over it.
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# ? Jun 23, 2020 20:10 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 06:43 |
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Kaiser Schnitzel posted:Those are neat shelves-I've not seen them before. Putting a bolt through shouldn't hurt anything, but I don't think it's at all necessary. If you wanted to make it even stronger, make the two outside pieces out of 3/4" ply instead of a solid wood 1x3 and then put a bolt through that and the stud if you want. Glued and screwed/nailed to the stud is waaay plenty strong though. I banged these out in my back yard last night ... God I need a workshop. I made the plywood supports almost twice as wide and then cut the tapers on a really crummy sled I made, but it seems like it worked. The plywood supports have a lot more glue surface area so I suspect they are significantly stronger than the others. I wish I had thought to use plywood, but Matthias's initial plans were stingy and I had a ton of 2x4s lying around and only a little bit of scrap 3/4" plywood.
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# ? Jun 23, 2020 22:03 |
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Kaiser Schnitzel posted:Oh yeah sorry-I see what you were asking now. If you aren’t adding any color (either with a pigmented/dye stain) you don’t need a conditioner. You may get some darker areas naturally in the wood, but if you’re oiling it and not adding color, there’s not much you can do about that. Usually maple takes oil pretty consistently ime. Great, thanks. I always appreciate your responses but especially when you tell me that things that I think are my mistakes are uh... "organic" features heh. Maple is exhausting compared to cedar holy smokes lol
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# ? Jun 23, 2020 22:32 |
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Trampus posted:Hey guys, I could use some advise on how to finish off a project. I built my tortoise a house but I'm not sure what type of roof to put on it. I'd like to keep it simple since I'm not that handy so one that's higher on one side and slopes in one direction seems like a good idea to me but I'm not sure.
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# ? Jun 23, 2020 22:53 |
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Trampus posted:Thanks. Any suggestions for what size lumber I should use for the rafters? 2x4s seem like overkill for this. I can get my wife to lend a hand if needed but I'd rather avoid that. We always get into fights whenever I try to have her help. It's tiny enough, you can probably build it on the ground and jack it on up there yourself if you have turtle forklift extensions.
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# ? Jun 23, 2020 23:19 |
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Has anyone tried making their own interior doors here? I'm trying to figure out if its worth it, I have an entire household of interior doors to put up as I currently don't have any or even have the doorways framed out. I'm only considering this because I could make every door 84" tall if I made them myself and solid core doors aren't cheap. I've looked at a few methods I found and was even considering welding up a type of frame and doing a steel/wood door. I already have almost all the tools to do this and if I'm doing the whole house making up the fixtures for the hinges wouldn't be a big deal. I really want to get back into woodworking and this would be the perfect excuse, any thought?
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# ? Jun 24, 2020 23:43 |
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SpeedFreek posted:Has anyone tried making their own interior doors here? I'm trying to figure out if its worth it, I have an entire household of interior doors to put up as I currently don't have any or even have the doorways framed out. I'm only considering this because I could make every door 84" tall if I made them myself and solid core doors aren't cheap. I've looked at a few methods I found and was even considering welding up a type of frame and doing a steel/wood door. Typical door height in the U.S. is 6'8" or 80 inches. Idk why you'd want to go solid core interior doors, but in fact the ones with particle board cores are quite cheap, or were compared to the labor involved in DiY. If you mean solid wood like 6 panel, that's another think altogether, and I would wonder if you have the proper tools. Your best bet would probably be to go with pre-hung doors (includes jambs, hinges and stops and are pre-drilled for handles) but if you insist on a full 84", you may have to get them custom made. Keep in mind there's typically an average 3/4" gap left all around in order to plumb them up. Also, being an old door hanger myself, I recently was prompted to upgrade the H-C slab doors in my home to 6 panel doors from a 2nd's lumber yard that had various dinged, scratched whatever'd doors. Turns out the panels and frames of those are veneered over particle board, but they look fabulous.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 00:36 |
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I picked 84" because I can do every door on the 2nd floor that height, my friend's childhood home had 12ft tall solid hardwood doors and the solid feel was really nice. I know I could just pick up some prehungs and did recently replace all my exterior doors that way but figure now that I'm on the interior it would be the time if I was going to do something like this. I saw a method where a hardwood faced plywood was used that all I would need to pick up were some more clamps to make it, and an electric planer if I was going to be doing this on all 9 doors. Based on the condition of the red oak plywood sitting in my half below grade garage for the last 6 years I wouldn't have to worry about warping much. On a different note regarding getting logs processed if you have access to a car trailer you can get a decent price to get them done if you help and do all the stacking back on the trailer yourself. I put them stacked off the ground a bit in one of my greenhouses (without plants in it) for at least a whole summer and it dries them very nicely.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 02:09 |
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SpeedFreek posted:I picked 84" because I can do every door on the 2nd floor that height, my friend's childhood home had 12ft tall solid hardwood doors and the solid feel was really nice. I know I could just pick up some prehungs and did recently replace all my exterior doors that way but figure now that I'm on the interior it would be the time if I was going to do something like this.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 02:28 |
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Depending how many doors you are making the large Festool domino would probably pay for itself pretty quickly.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 02:39 |
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The method I saw was take a 3/4" or two thinner pieces glued together and some thinner pieces overlapping the center piece a bit on the sides like so =------=. Then dado a strip of hardwood to a "T" to fit between the thinner outer pieces and to trim out the edges. It takes a flat workbench and a ton of clamps, I figure I could square it up on my tablesaw if I need to. I already have a nice cabinet saw and a nice new dado set I'm waiting on an excuse to use. My dad has a 30" planer and huge jointer for any rough sawn stuff. I was thinking of the big rear end dowel method if I did a normal hardwood panel style door, first I need to go through my lumber pile to see what all I have to use. edit: Meow Meow Meow posted:Depending how many doors you are making the large Festool domino would probably pay for itself pretty quickly. Thanks for the feedback everyone. SpeedFreek fucked around with this message at 02:58 on Jun 25, 2020 |
# ? Jun 25, 2020 02:55 |
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SpeedFreek posted:The method I saw was take a 3/4" or two thinner pieces glued together and some thinner pieces overlapping the center piece a bit on the sides like so =------=. Then dado a strip of hardwood to a "T" to fit between the thinner outer pieces and to trim out the edges. It takes a flat workbench and a ton of clamps, I figure I could square it up on my tablesaw if I need to. Most locking hardware throw bolt is 1" wide, and the center of the lock backsets 2 3/8" with about a 2 1/4" hole- so you'd have to work that somehow. So that edge piece would want to be the same as a typical door, 1 3/8" thick x 4" if you're using standard hardware. edit- also it sounds like your dad has a hella shop, and good for him.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 04:58 |
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My neighbour cut down a palm and theres some good sized sections of trunk I'm eyeing to turn into my first ever bowl blanks, is that kind of wood going to be okay for turning or not?
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 06:41 |
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Anyone have a good venue for us to convene when this site goes down? I hate dealing with craft forums, too many assholes named Jim that have the troll baby as their avatar
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 07:02 |
I can't speak to how it is for turning, but palm trees have a fundamentally different internal structure than other trees. They're monocots instead of dicots, so they'll probably be real fibrous and pithy like a corn stalk on steroids. I'm sure people use it for lumber, but it won't have any heartwood (or knots) and I suspect it'll be a pain in the rear end to work and prone to splitting.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 07:13 |
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HolHorsejob posted:Anyone have a good venue for us to convene when this site goes down? I hate dealing with craft forums, too many assholes named Jim that have the troll baby as their avatar maybe a discord?
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 12:05 |
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HolHorsejob posted:Anyone have a good venue for us to convene when this site goes down? I hate dealing with craft forums, too many assholes named Jim that have the troll baby as their avatar I'm not giving up on SA just yet, I think there's a real chance it gets salvaged in the next week or two. But if not, Bread and Roses seems to be the offsite that's gaining the most traction. I'm still lurking to get a feel for it. It's definitely smaller, and different, but they're actively courting SA members and the broad culture strokes feel similar to me. They already have a crafting/maker subforum where I think a woodworking thread would be welcome. It has a $10 entry fee, but it can be waived by PMing someone on these forums to prove you have an account here (but I just paid it). ColdPie fucked around with this message at 12:23 on Jun 25, 2020 |
# ? Jun 25, 2020 12:21 |
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HolHorsejob posted:Anyone have a good venue for us to convene when this site goes down? I hate dealing with craft forums, too many assholes named Jim that have the troll baby as their avatar I have not found a great woodworking forum anywhere else on the internet. Practical Machinist has a small but good (though slow) woodworking forum I've browsed occasionally, and someone itt has mentioned the old woodworking machines forum as being better than most.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 12:42 |
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Are the Wood River vises any good?
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 13:44 |
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The Slack Lagoon posted:Are the Wood River vises any good? Which one are you looking at? Wood River makes great tools, but for something like a vise, I don't know that their higher cost is worth it.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 14:00 |
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AFewBricksShy posted:Which one are you looking at? Wood River makes great tools, but for something like a vise, I don't know that their higher cost is worth it. This one. My friend said he got the sales circular for July a few days early and it's going on sale for $99 https://www.woodcraft.com/products/woodriver-9in-quick-release-vise
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 14:38 |
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Spookydonut posted:My neighbour cut down a palm and theres some good sized sections of trunk I'm eyeing to turn into my first ever bowl blanks, is that kind of wood going to be okay for turning or not? Like previously mentioned it appears to be very stringy, looks like it can be used as planks but not much else. I'll give you all the hardwood logs you want if you're willing to drive to SE WI and pick them out of my log pile.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 14:48 |
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Opinions on dowels over pocket screws? I want this to be my next project to up my finish skills and work with banding: https://www.buildsomething.com/plans/P9D220B4195927A39/Golf-bag-stand I’ve not used either pocket screws or dowels, but pocket screws seem to be a stronger connection. Dowels will be a cheaper cost to get into, but pocket screws seem to be en vogue on YouTube.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 15:18 |
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Pocket holes all the way. A little pricier, but ease of use is way nicer..
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 15:23 |
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The Slack Lagoon posted:This one. My friend said he got the sales circular for July a few days early and it's going on sale for $99 I'd rather someone else with more knowledge weight in, but is that going to be worth $30 more than https://smile.amazon.com/Yost-M9WW-Rapid-Acting-Working/dp/B00SIQ1DDG/ ? I'm sure it's made to tighter tolerances with better steel, but if you're only using it to hold something in place while working on it, does that matter? AFewBricksShy fucked around with this message at 15:30 on Jun 25, 2020 |
# ? Jun 25, 2020 15:28 |
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SpeedFreek posted:Like previously mentioned it appears to be very stringy, looks like it can be used as planks but not much else. I'll give you all the hardwood logs you want if you're willing to drive to SE WI and pick them out of my log pile. My car won't go across oceans What the heck would roughly 1x1 ft sections of palm wood be good for? Firewood? savesthedayrocks posted:Opinions on dowels over pocket screws? I want this to be my next project to up my finish skills and work with banding: Use both, just dont glue the dowels, the problem I find with pocket hole screws is you need to excessively clamp it to prevent movement, dowels (and please spend $5 to buy a set of dowel centers) really help keep everything aligned nicely, and screws let you disassemble stuff. AFewBricksShy posted:I'd rather someone else with more knowledge weight in, but is that going to be worth $30 more than https://smile.amazon.com/Yost-M9WW-Rapid-Acting-Working/dp/B00SIQ1DDG/ ? Support small(er) business Spookydonut fucked around with this message at 15:31 on Jun 25, 2020 |
# ? Jun 25, 2020 15:29 |
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Olothreutes posted:I can't speak to how it is for turning, but palm trees have a fundamentally different internal structure than other trees. They're monocots instead of dicots, so they'll probably be real fibrous and pithy like a corn stalk on steroids. I'm sure people use it for lumber, but it won't have any heartwood (or knots) and I suspect it'll be a pain in the rear end to work and prone to splitting. I love that this thread has actual botany knowers along with the many sawdust creators. Also the advantage of dowels is they can help keep long length boards aligned on the surface. Two different applications, imo. Mr. Mambold fucked around with this message at 18:08 on Jun 25, 2020 |
# ? Jun 25, 2020 18:06 |
Spookydonut posted:My neighbour cut down a palm and theres some good sized sections of trunk I'm eyeing to turn into my first ever bowl blanks, is that kind of wood going to be okay for turning or not? I’ve turned black palm. It sucked. Looked pretty enough, though. e: Bad Munki posted:Working on a couple more tap handles for another friend's bar. This time just a set of two, one in tulipwood and one in black palm. Here's the black palm one (still has some more finishing to do, but it's most of the way there.) Excuse the posting style, that was almost a decade ago. Bad Munki fucked around with this message at 18:14 on Jun 25, 2020 |
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 18:11 |
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Bad Munki posted:I’ve turned black palm. It sucked. Looked pretty enough, though. Nothing really wrong with the posting style. When turning extremely soft or fibrous materials, I've had some luck turning them with a rasp rather than trying to use a chisel or gouge. I've never turned palm though. Maybe try hitting it with sanding sealer?
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 18:34 |
Yeah, a rasp or similar would likely work much better. Or just get it somewhat close to the goal and then break out the ol’ 60-grit gouge. I never felt a desire to go back and try again, though. It just wasn’t fun.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 18:53 |
Kaiser Schnitzel posted:I'm with ColdPie-I don't think this ship has sunk yet, and if it does, there is enough goon talent to rebuild modern society from the ground up, much less make a new webforum. Hop in one of the many goon lifeboat discords, and we'll muddle through somehow I'm sure. There's a maker/diy forum on breadnroses.net the cspam off-site that has been growing insanely rapidly, it's tucked under the art forum now but I think there's a good chance it will move to top level if it gets more traffic from diy refugees. Several of the 3d printer thread guys are over there and so on, I think anyone who doesn't want a forum infested with grumpy old racist men and so on might want to check it out
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 19:57 |
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How do you get an invite code for it?
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:16 |
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MetaJew posted:How do you get an invite code for it? ditto
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:23 |
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It asks for one but right now you don't actually need one, and can submit the form without one. Also don't pay the money, they're letting goons in for free. Also there's drama around the people running the site, and reene and other SA mods. here's what I know, start with this post, in the TG chat thread. I don't know anything more than what's posted right there in that thread but it's already making me go ughhhh. Maybe it'll all be fine. Sure. It's fine.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:31 |
Leave the invite code blank and if you pay 10 bux I think you're auto approved and they're approving everyone anyway eventually right now, they're trying to get members
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:32 |
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shovelbum posted:the cspam off-site that has been growing insanely rapidly This sounds like hell honestly.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:33 |
The junk collector posted:This sounds like hell honestly. cspam basically got to where it was the 2nd most active forum after GBS, and probably the most organized, so there was already an offsite at scale after the whole Lowtax livestreaming with alt-right guys and "live-banning" trans ppl a few months ago
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:36 |
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I've been on it for a day. Just ignore the politics half like you ignore D&D here. Seems fine so far. The most recent announcement here makes me think they're working on some kind of "official" offsite, so worth keeping an eye out for that, too.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:37 |
ColdPie posted:I've been on it for a day. Just ignore the politics half like you ignore D&D here. Seems fine so far. Yeah every day of your life you're in a million spaces run by right wing assholes and crusty old white dudes. If a leftist-run space is only for debating communist theory or whatever it's a joke and a failure.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:38 |
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# ? Jun 5, 2024 06:43 |
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Bad Munki posted:Working on a couple more tap handles for another friend's bar. This time just a set of two, one in tulipwood and one in black palm. Here's the black palm one (still has some more finishing to do, but it's most of the way there.) drat, but that looks instantly antique and perfect for a bar. I wonder if you <-- accent on you, not me turned it slower with a really sharp gouge if it would reduce the hellishness.
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# ? Jun 25, 2020 20:56 |