What's on your WORK BENCH - October 2021

Steve Sanford

Well-known member
All~


Wow! October 7 and no Work Bench posts yet...too busy gunning?


As you may have seen, I have gotten (partially) back from NDR World. I rehabbed a dozen Bean's Coastals:


View attachment JAB 23 - Mallards and Blacks in bag.JPG





I am making a bunch of various boat parts for a variety of vessels, but took a few hours to make this shelf for our living room:


View attachment LR Shelf - FULL.JPG



I have made quite a few of shelves like this over the years - but tweaked the "scantlings" just a bit.


The brackets are made from 5/4 stock and the shelf has a lip so looks thicker. I am not sure yet whether or these changes are improvements.....


View attachment LR Shelf - detail.JPG





All the best,


SJS








View attachment JAB 23 - Mallards and Blacks in bag.JPG
 
Tom
Thanks. You still researching the PP breeders? Mines back from the trainers she loves the dog.
Trained for waterfowl and upland.


thomas wilkins said:
Patrick,
You have a very unique style. I like the Merganser and Goldeneye. Very Cool!!!

Tom
 

Dave,

Two thumbs up!

For Basswood, of various types, that grain is as good as it gets IMO.

Ya brought out the hidden beauty that nature provided, and that few see.

It will be a wonderful gift and family heirloom.


Best regards
Vince
 
Something on my bench, and something under it.

A quick little project was turning a mallet from Bois D'arc for a froe and restoring an old camp axe that I bought in 1990 and kept in my first truck for many years. From there is was relegated to a dark corner in the shed and covered in cobwebs. Pulled it out and remembered just what a handy size it was so the handle was sanded and refinished and head sharpened like a razor and protected with a new sheath. It and the mallet/froe combination will see plenty of use this fall splitting firewood at the Ryan brothers duck cabin adjacent to Jackson County WMA where we hang out leading up to a during the season.

View attachment Img_3992.jpg

Secondly, I am in the home stretch of the drawer project I started last month. I opted for hardwood runners after pricing bearing slides for these 24x30 oversized drawers. It would have been over a grand so there you go, good old wood runners. Funny thing is when waxed they are just as easy to operate and I find them more pleasing. All that is left is to machine and attach the pine fronts and then the handles. Should wrap it up this week.

View attachment IMG_3985.JPG

View attachment IMG_3988.JPG

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Eric,

Nice work on everything. I have a full size axe which was new around 1964. It still has it's original handle, which tells one it has not been abused too much. I need to make a good sheath for the head. The edge and face has been polished and lapped to a mirror finish. Now I just need to teach my grandson how to swing it. [sly]
 
Dave

I thought you were going to say you'd replaced the handle three times and the head once :) Making old axes and hatchets look new again, or even better than new in your example, can turn into a hobby in-and-of itself. I have four really cool old Boy Scout hatchets made by Brideport (the same folks that make the famous end mill) awaiting restoration. Maybe a project for this fall or winter.

Eric
 
Tod

Thanks. The long workbench with drawers was in my mind at the very outset of the shop construction project. That was over seven years ago (holy crap I didn't realize that much time had gone by since I broke ground until I just now added it up) and finally is about to come off the "to-do" list. The drawers will really consolidate a lot of tools into one easy to get to location. Thus, removing the need to climb a ladder on the other side of the building for a tool that should be at hand.

Eric
 
Almost forgot. I made a little flashlight rack between finishing the drawers and sweeping up. Got tired of flashlights falling over. Problem solved. Simple dovetail construction and stuck to the wall with a couple pocket screws.



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Eric Patterson said:
Dang Dave, those bends look true. I like it. You use a brake?

Eric

Eric,

Nope. Made a cereal box cardboard pattern to get the bend locations. Clamped along the bend line with a hand clamp for wood working and just used raw muscle against a open wood surface to generate the sharp bends. For the large round bend around the cup, I did a series of hand bends over an "anvil" (my 3/4 diameter tool rest on my wood lathe). Just kept going back and forth closing the radius as I went.

Pretty soft aluminum but stiffened up well with the finished form.

PS. Missed your last couple postings, Nice work yourself.
 
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Good morning, Dave~


Great alchemy! Making beauty with cereal boxes and rotted wood - good stuff!


As usual, I have projects on many fronts. These enormous Wave Riders are steadily becoming Hens.


View attachment Wave Riders - on bench.JPG



I am also making parts for 3 different South Bay Duckboats. Here are 3 Motor Boards and 5 Backer Boards - with sealing coats of epoxy curing by the stove.


View attachment 3 Motor Boards + 5 Backer Boards.JPG



I also laid up 3 "XL" spray shields over the past several days.



View attachment XL in layup - with stock for comparison.JPG



Because I use polyester resin for any all-glass lamination, I do it outside. They are curing and off-gassing in the sun and rain.


View attachment 3 XLs in sun.JPG



Later today I will use that jig to laminate some Mahogany thatch rails for the shields. And, I will gluing up a pair of 12-foot long thatch rails (to be attached to the decks) , making some flotation for the Scull Boat, and beginning some flapper boards for 2 South Bays.....


All the best,


SJS




 
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