swt61 Posted October 1, 2020 Report Posted October 1, 2020 I'm working on making some raised panel doors. My landlord has a rental house somewhere north of Sacramento, and I guess he had some tenants that managed to break 5 solid oak cabinet doors. He couldn't find anyone who could make replacements in any sort of timely manner, when he asked me if I could make cabinet doors? Silly man! Anyway, I was putting the last frame together with glue and pocket screws, when the bit jumped out of the screw and decided to go all the way through my hand. I was applying pressure because of the hard oak. Maybe just a little too much! Luckily Al's cleaning woman, Toni was there. She cleaned the entry and exit wounds and bandaged me up. I was able to get right back to it. Just goes to show you that any tool can be dangerous in the hands of an idiot. Luckily it was the fleshy part, under the thumb. 1 15
dsavitsk Posted October 1, 2020 Report Posted October 1, 2020 On 9/29/2020 at 4:02 PM, Iron_Dreamer said: Yikes, Al! The fires have been ridiculous. For some context, the fires, just this year, and just in CA, have already burned an area larger than Connecticut. 1 3
swt61 Posted October 1, 2020 Report Posted October 1, 2020 It's OK though, Trumps going to bring us forest management. 2
Aimless1 Posted October 2, 2020 Report Posted October 2, 2020 22 minutes ago, swt61 said: I'm working on making some raised panel doors. My landlord has a rental house somewhere north of Sacramento, and I guess he had some tenants that managed to break 5 solid oak cabinet doors. He couldn't find anyone who could make replacements in any sort of timely manner, when he asked me if I could make cabinet doors? Silly man! Anyway, I was putting the last frame together with glue and pocket screws, when the bit jumped out of the screw and decided to go all the way through my hand. I was applying pressure because of the hard oak. Maybe just a little too much! Luckily Al's cleaning woman, Toni was there. She cleaned the entry and exit wounds and bandaged me up. I was able to get right back to it. Just goes to show you that any tool can be dangerous in the hands of an idiot. Luckily it was the fleshy part, under the thumb. I'm beginning to think Milo and Otis failed their OSHA indoctrination Glad you're ok Steve! 2 2
swt61 Posted October 2, 2020 Report Posted October 2, 2020 The important thing is the doors are fine. 9
Dusty Chalk Posted October 2, 2020 Report Posted October 2, 2020 Glad you’re relatively okay, Steve. Also glad you have a woman in your life. 😉
robm321 Posted October 2, 2020 Report Posted October 2, 2020 Are we going to just ignore that Steve got his entrance AND EXIT wounds cleaned up, got back to work and finished the job? That's pretty badass 8
Augsburger Posted October 2, 2020 Report Posted October 2, 2020 Steve, what is the white part of that door?
swt61 Posted October 2, 2020 Report Posted October 2, 2020 When I build raised panel doors that are going to be painted (by the customer), I like to paint the edges of the panels before securing them in the frame. Otherwise when those panels shrink up a little bit in winter, you'll see some tiny edges of bare wood. This way the panels can expand and contract inside the frames without that happening. But it's all one solid oak panel. 7
swt61 Posted October 3, 2020 Report Posted October 3, 2020 I'm happy to see that I'm still a fast healer. I can count the number of times I've ever had a wound become infected on two fingers. Still slightly sore, but fully functioning. Really just tender when I press directly on the wound. My body makes up in healing what my brain lacks in intelligence. 3 2 3 1
sbelyo Posted October 3, 2020 Report Posted October 3, 2020 was that straight through with a nail? opened a fat sack from mouser 1
swt61 Posted October 3, 2020 Report Posted October 3, 2020 No nail, look up at the first post on this page.
sbelyo Posted October 3, 2020 Report Posted October 3, 2020 yeah, I read that just now. Good Night that's some force to push a bit like that through your hand!
swt61 Posted October 4, 2020 Report Posted October 4, 2020 Had to wait on some of the jungle gym stuff to arrive to be able to finish up. I got a big thumbs up from the most important of the clients. 16
Craig Sawyers Posted October 5, 2020 Report Posted October 5, 2020 On 10/3/2020 at 1:20 AM, sbelyo said: opened a fat sack from mouser What is the sack for? Wotcha going to build?
sbelyo Posted October 5, 2020 Report Posted October 5, 2020 6 hours ago, Craig Sawyers said: What is the sack for? Wotcha going to build? It's all the parts to build a Dynalo MkII and a GRLV to power it. Stocking up for the winter build season 2
swt61 Posted October 5, 2020 Report Posted October 5, 2020 You must live in one of those cold places. I remember stocking up on models to build in winter. 2
swt61 Posted October 7, 2020 Report Posted October 7, 2020 I got bored today and decided not to wait for Milo. Just a down and dirty TT stand. The bottom shelf is morticed into the legs, then attached with trim screws that I covered with plugs (plugs still need to be cut flush and sanded). It should hold enough records, as I plan to limit myself this time around. I have a Cherry slab (cutting board) that the TT actually sets on. The Cherry slab will sit on top of this stand with my Hudson HiFi Bigfoot silicone isolation feet between the two surfaces. I plan to Ebonize the stand, then finish with Arm-R-Seal (much to Doug's dismay). 9 1
swt61 Posted October 7, 2020 Report Posted October 7, 2020 The top is made up of two pieces of 1/2" plywood, with T-nuts buried in between the two. The legs have threaded inserts that screw into the T-nuts. Very solid if not exactly beautiful. It should look better when stained Black.
dsavitsk Posted October 7, 2020 Report Posted October 7, 2020 8 minutes ago, swt61 said: I plan to Ebonize the stand, then finish with Arm-R-Seal (much to Doug's dismay). So long as you do the ebonizing with tannin and iron, I'll be OK ... ... looks great, as always.
swt61 Posted October 7, 2020 Report Posted October 7, 2020 I'm using charcoal briquettes and Catcoon poop. 2
swt61 Posted October 8, 2020 Report Posted October 8, 2020 (edited) Got it stained and milled 1/16" deep, round recesses in the top for the Bigfoot Isolation feet to seat into, otherwise they tend to slide around. Will start the clearcoat process tomorrow. I'm expecting not to have to worry about flies landing in my clearcoat, since they seem to greatly prefer Pence's head. Edited October 8, 2020 by swt61 5 2
luvdunhill Posted October 8, 2020 Report Posted October 8, 2020 The top is made up of two pieces of 1/2" plywood, with T-nuts buried in between the two. The legs have threaded inserts that screw into the T-nuts. Very solid if not exactly beautiful. It should look better when stained Black.So the threaded rod goes all the way through the legs? I don’t get where you are putting your nuts?
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