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Posted (edited)

That is possible here that it is a way to dry the wood, but it was done with hazardous chemicals and definitely used to beautify the material. The term is fumed and I am pretty sure there isn't much heat applied, if any. Hence the appeal to the woodworker and chemist :)

Edited by luvdunhill
Posted

I am certainly up for that. No problem with the chemicals, and lots of extra fume hoods that I can seal and then

evacuate safely. Great for oak and such, but that seems boring. need to find out what it is going to do with

my favorite hardwoods. Probably only one way to find out.

  • 4 months later...
Posted

I have a bit of rattle in my knob and was wondering if anyone had a solution (… stares at swt61 …)

 

I am using the Keystone panel bearing which seems to be comfortable with a 0.25" shaft and measuring that same shaft on my micrometer is amazingly 0.250". The shaft of the knob is 0.240", so we're talking about a 5mil gap.

 

Ideas:

 

some sort of adhesive teflon or even teflon tape?

heat shrink (probably a dumb idea)

some part buried at mcmaster-carr that fits the bill perfectly?

Posted

The problem of a shaft that fits loosely into a hole, is one I've had exactly zero experience with. ;)

 

Teflon tape is going to be very difficult to keep in place, while fitting the knob onto the shaft. I would try some masking tape, as I think it'll hold onto the shaft better.

Posted

The Teflon tape seems to be working. The problem is that it isn't super durable even after 10 or so layers it took to get the right diameter. It worked perfectly for a bit and now has slight rattle.. it's like the tape is compressing with use. I will leave it for now I guess...

  • 1 month later...
  • 11 months later...
Posted (edited)

Red tiger eye knob (FYI  not for T2)

 

redknob.jpg

 

...and a chunk of some nice blue tigers eye stone I just got, for to make more knobs....

 

blu.jpg

Knob geometry.jpg

Edited by Milosz
Restored photo removed by board software
  • Like 4

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