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Thread: Mitre-jointed jarrah table
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21st June 2005, 11:04 PM #16
Great work as usual Rock, most of us here could learn much from your skills.
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21st June 2005, 11:16 PM #17GOLD MEMBER
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Very nice work. Looks like a lot of time and patience.
Bob
"If a man is after money, he's money mad; if he keeps it, he's a capitalist; if he spends it, he's a playboy; if he doesn't get it, he's a never-do-well; if he doesn't try to get it, he lacks ambition. If he gets it without working for it; he's a parasite; and if he accumulates it after a life time of hard work, people call him a fool who never got anything out of life."
- Vic Oliver
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22nd June 2005, 12:43 AM #18
mighty fine Mr Rocker, mighty fine! I am very impressed with your mitres...
I must admit I have personally given up on mitres until I get myself a table saw, just not pleased with the results Im getting with the Triton.You can never have enough planes, that is why Mr Stanley invented the 1/2s
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22nd June 2005, 07:13 PM #19
Great table nice work. Hope I can aspire to somtimg like that soon
Liked the photo's and the jig
Keep up the good work
Sam
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22nd June 2005, 09:53 PM #20Member
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Umm,.... WOW! Awesome work Rocker! Fantastic skills to get those joints so precise.
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23rd June 2005, 10:23 AM #21
Rocker, a great design, beautifully executed. Liked seeing the construction detail, that Veritas 4 way clamp seems to come into its own on jobs like that one! Especially liked the table saw set-up with the sacrificial fence and sawing the mitre on the top face, great "out of the box thinking.
jacko
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24th June 2005, 10:13 PM #22GOLD MEMBER
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A very nice table Rocker and a very informative post . Can your jig be used horizontally to enable mortises to be cut in long aprons and so avoid having to set up step ladders . Or may'be a saw pit might be the go .
PeterI've just become an optimist . Iv'e made a 25 year plan -oopps I've had a few birthdays - better make that a 20 year plan
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25th June 2005, 03:57 AM #23
Peter,
No, my jig can't be used horizontally; however, I have used it successfully to cut mortices in the end-grain of long rails by clamping the rail vertically in a vice, clamping the jig to the top of the rail, and then standing on my workbench to rout the mortice. By this method, it is quite easy to rout mortices in the end-grain of rails up to about 2.2 m long. Mortices in longer rails could be routed by the same method, but standing on a tall step ladder instead of the workbench.
Rocker
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25th June 2005, 09:43 AM #24Originally Posted by Rocker
As usual, inspiring work, Rocker.
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