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Thread: Hints and Tips
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5th August 2006, 10:21 PM #1Senior Member
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Hints and Tips
Thought I might start a new thread on Hints and Tips. Apart frpm a few like Tony Ward, we are all struggling and any help we can give one another is always appreciated.
Here are a couple I have come across (I'm not claiming credit for most of these either!)
As Tony said in another thread, glue your runners on with Super Glue. I suggest you use Loctite 401. It costs about $20 but will last for ages without going hard as you keep it in the fridge (when you buy it make sure they have kept it in the fridge). To use, just take from the fridge, pour (yes pour, you don't have to squeeze so BE CAREFUL). Then put back in the fridge. No glued on tops ever again.
Use a piece of timber the same as the box timber, but make it thicker than you need, then plane down to a good fit with a block plane.
A couple of sanding ideas -
Wrap a strip of sandpaper around a piece of dowel, tape at both ends, and stick in the lathe. Great for sanding curved surfaces (with the lathe on - watch that the flap goes in the correct direction or else big mess)
Glue a piece of sandpaper to a flat stick including both sides (ie 2" x 1"). I find it very very useful for sanding small areas flat.
Tape a whole piece of sandpaper to a solid piece of ply or yellow tongue, attach the timber to the bench firmly (ie with nails) and you have a good flat surface for sanding backs of boxes, or either side of a bandsaw cut to get them flat.
Most people tend to glue handles on the front of their box drawers, but a few (particularly Australian, ie Tony Ward and Alan Williams) actually carve the handle into the font of the drawer. To do this you need to cut your drawer front quite thick (ie 10-15mm). Then carve with a carving tool and/or a Kutzall ( a silicon carbide burr that fits into the Dremel - see the adds in some issues of Australian Woodworker). Boy does this make life easy, so long as you control it or you will have a bigger hole than you bargained for. Then you can finish off with other dremel style tools such as sanding cylinders, etc. Big W etc have this little kit (red with clear cover) for about $30 with heaps of little tools in it.
Have fun
Don
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5th August 2006 10:21 PM # ADSGoogle Adsense Advertisement
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6th August 2006, 09:13 PM #2Senior Member
- Join Date
- Mar 2002
- Location
- Brushgrove, NSW, Australia
- Age
- 77
- Posts
- 261
Piccies
A few piccies to explain what I said in the previous post.
First pic shows some of the sanding tips I got from Alan Williams, as well as the Dremel type tool attachment kit and the Superglue. Second shows the dowel with sandpaper in the lathe (again from Alan Williams) and the third are my two Kutzall grinders.
Hope to see a few more tips from other bandsaw box makers, I could certainly do with as much help as possible.
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7th August 2006, 06:32 PM #3
Gidday Don thanks for those tips mate
Can only think of one tip I can pass on at present...
Get a small B&D moble table vice setup (Bunnys Mitre10 etc cheep as chups ) take the legs off it and bolt it to the benchtop... this is ideal for small cutting sanding and clamping jobs... I put all my pens together and do all my box clamp ups using this table vice on benchBelieve me there IS life beyond marriage!!! Relax breathe and smile learn to laugh again from the heart so it reaches the eyes!!
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