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How To Build A Coffee Table










BIG STUFF This is specifically for those who make the bigger things. Furniture in general, tables, wall units... You know BIG stuff. No pens, no little boxes, no little clocks, no little toys, etc. If its big and you've made it or are working on it or intend to make it then here's a place especially for you. Show us your stuff.

 

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  #31  
Old 30th Jan 2012, 09:27 AM
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Great job Tony, well detailed posts and a fantastic result. I wish that I was as advanced as you with my dining suite project....cheers Kerry
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  #32  
Old 30th Jan 2012, 11:41 PM
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You have done a great job there. The table top is an eye catcher. Normally I view slab tables as more out by the barbie but that one has the class (for want of a better word) to grace any dining room. I am also in awe of people who can make chairs. I have not yet summoned the nerve to try a chair. Really good post on the how it was done also.
Regards
John
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  #33  
Old 31st Jan 2012, 12:41 AM
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Wow, amazing result for such a tight budget and basic tools. Great job!
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  #34  
Old 31st Jan 2012, 11:09 PM
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This is an amazing effort mate well done
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  #35  
Old 31st Jan 2012, 11:44 PM
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one day I may gain such skills great stuff!!
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  #36  
Old 3rd Feb 2012, 09:47 PM
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Great post work in progress. Thank you for the write up.
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  #37  
Old 23rd Feb 2012, 01:41 AM
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hello i'm a newbie to all these woodwork! may i ask how do you drill the holes for the joint into such shape for the chair? i try to drill it with driller but it seems so rough and not in the right shape. and i saw a router in your picture, are you using that to drill?
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  #38  
Old 23rd Feb 2012, 01:37 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jovian View Post
hello i'm a newbie to all these woodwork! may i ask how do you drill the holes for the joint into such shape for the chair? i try to drill it with driller but it seems so rough and not in the right shape. and i saw a router in your picture, are you using that to drill?
Firstly welcome to the forum. You can use a router to make the holes as well as drilling them amoung other ways.

An example for end grain cuts you will need a flat area where the piece you are going to cut is secured flush with the flat area then plunge the router into the piece. There is a little more to this then just that, like a fence so the router does not wander in any direction then the direction you want. I hope this gives you some insight.

I would suggest that you start a new thread with a specific question. Would give you some guide and different thinking and options.
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  #39  
Old 24th Feb 2012, 01:49 AM
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Hi Jovian

As Christos said maybe start a new thread as there is more than one way to do this. But to answer your question.

I used a small router (6mm) marked out the mortise (the holes / slots) and then mounted the piece in a jig. The jig is a "T" piece of scraps of mdf with a slot in the top and the work piece held against the face underneath the slot. The router bit is set to the depth required (*inc the jig top thickness). Also stops for the longitudinal travel and the fence to keep it on the centreline of the slot.

I liked this because for chairs - once set up you can repeat exactly many times. After marking up carefully of course.

I suggest you do what I did which is look at the router forums here and do a youtube or google for guys showing how to do router mortise jigs. I also watched Template Tom who is very knowledgable with jigs etc.
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