Wend
Established Member
I've had ambitions to make a mini workbench for some time now, to allow me to have work higher up, have a bench with dog holes, and have a vice at 90 degrees to the vice on my bench. I got a vice some time ago, and it and some maple and poplar have been lying around getting in the way for months, so this weekend I finally got around to making a start on it.
The maple started off around 4cm thick, 22cm wide, and 108cm long. 50cm is about the right length for me, so I started off by cutting it in half. However, it also had a significant amount of cupping, twist, and machine marks on it.
Even if I could flatten it, 22cm wide would be pushing it. The vice is 18cm wide, and it would need legs either side of that. 2cm legs might be OK, but wider sounds better. So the best plan seemed to be to cut off the most cupped section of each half, and glue them together, for a total width of around 26cm (so 4cm wide legs). However, the drill press can only handle up to about 11cm deep, so if I want to use it to drill the central dog holes then I'll need to make the two pieces different widths, so the center is entirely on one side. So the plan is a 16cm wide piece, and a 10cm wide piece.
I wasn't sure how to make the legs at first, but I played around with it a bit in openscad, and came up with kind of C-shaped pieces (from the poplar), 4cm by 8cm, about 18cm tall, and with a 4x4cm cutout to allow clamping from both the front/back and the side. Something like this:
I'm not quite sure what dog hole pattern to use, but for now I've gone with 10cm spacing and offsetting the inside and outside holes. This leaves one hole over the vice, so it won't be able to go all the way through; not sure whether I'd regret that or not.
In any case, I set to work flattening/untwisting/uncupping the first piece. Phew! I think if I use maple again, I will order it PAR in the thickness that I need! But it's pretty much there now. There's still a few rough shallow spots, but I think I will leave that until the final planing once the two pieces are glued together.
Unfortunately, I didn't notice a little damage on one edge until after I'd made the cut. I'm not yet sure whether to cut/plane it down to closer to 15cm wide (at which point the dog holes will only be 1cm from the edge) or to just make that the bottom face and live with it.
Anyway, I think I'll give my arms a rest before tackling the other piece and the edge jointing!
Take care,
Wend
The maple started off around 4cm thick, 22cm wide, and 108cm long. 50cm is about the right length for me, so I started off by cutting it in half. However, it also had a significant amount of cupping, twist, and machine marks on it.
Even if I could flatten it, 22cm wide would be pushing it. The vice is 18cm wide, and it would need legs either side of that. 2cm legs might be OK, but wider sounds better. So the best plan seemed to be to cut off the most cupped section of each half, and glue them together, for a total width of around 26cm (so 4cm wide legs). However, the drill press can only handle up to about 11cm deep, so if I want to use it to drill the central dog holes then I'll need to make the two pieces different widths, so the center is entirely on one side. So the plan is a 16cm wide piece, and a 10cm wide piece.
I wasn't sure how to make the legs at first, but I played around with it a bit in openscad, and came up with kind of C-shaped pieces (from the poplar), 4cm by 8cm, about 18cm tall, and with a 4x4cm cutout to allow clamping from both the front/back and the side. Something like this:
I'm not quite sure what dog hole pattern to use, but for now I've gone with 10cm spacing and offsetting the inside and outside holes. This leaves one hole over the vice, so it won't be able to go all the way through; not sure whether I'd regret that or not.
In any case, I set to work flattening/untwisting/uncupping the first piece. Phew! I think if I use maple again, I will order it PAR in the thickness that I need! But it's pretty much there now. There's still a few rough shallow spots, but I think I will leave that until the final planing once the two pieces are glued together.
Unfortunately, I didn't notice a little damage on one edge until after I'd made the cut. I'm not yet sure whether to cut/plane it down to closer to 15cm wide (at which point the dog holes will only be 1cm from the edge) or to just make that the bottom face and live with it.
Anyway, I think I'll give my arms a rest before tackling the other piece and the edge jointing!
Take care,
Wend