Recent content by glynster

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  1. glynster

    Butcher's block in the shape of a meat cleaver

    I havent made or seen one Alan but it hardly takes much imagination to envision it. Make a standard chopping board blank (lots of how tos out there - basic grain alternating glue up), draw or print off the cleaver shape, tape it to the chopping board blank and cut it out carefully on the bandsaw...
  2. glynster

    Glue recommendation for staircase build

    Thanks for all of the advice, I think I will use standard yellow titebond for the treads and risers, wedges etc and Epoxy for the stringer and handrail mortices - I had forgotten that Epoxy was the glue of choice for boat building and so it must have some flex(in my mind I saw epoxy as...
  3. glynster

    Glue recommendation for staircase build

    I've built my first staircase in solid oak using traditional methods only - except the stringers are made with a jig and will be wedged with softwood (big props to Mark Milner's "Simply Stairs" book). Its only a half flight going between split levels but it includes a landing which I made. I...
  4. glynster

    Exotic hardwoods and skin problems!

    When I first started woodworking I was unaware of any of these issues, I spent half a day sanding down American Black Walnut in an enclosed garage (Back in the days when I thought "Hey its just sawdust"). That evening I was incredibly ill and agitated. It felt like a combination between flu and...
  5. glynster

    Should I make solid interoak doors or laminated "engineered"

    I'm about to make a bunch of doors, we bought a 17th century house in bad repair and the large modern extension is full of crappy 1970s hollow hardboard doors that I want to replace. I plan on making the doors because the house is special and deserves a custom touch, having never made entry...
  6. glynster

    Roy Sutton basic spindle moulding

    That's an old myth and no longer relevant to modern machines with cutters to current safety standards - I at least know that much. Thanks anyway.
  7. glynster

    Roy Sutton basic spindle moulding

    I'd be very interested to see that Peter - its very much needed. I dont agree that there are "loads" on youtube - I dont see one decent or complete beginner introduction - its all scant, dated and mostly junk clips.
  8. glynster

    Roy Sutton basic spindle moulding

    Is Roy Sutton's the ONLY DVD on Spindle Moulding in the known Universe? An hour googling suggests it might be - (what a gap in the market). Does anybody know if there's still a last copy for sale on a dusty bottom shelf of some tiny hardware shop somewhere? I cant seem to find it anywhere for...
  9. glynster

    Moving a big table saw on my own

    Thanks for the replies - its filled me with both hope and dread :-) There is some good advice there and its got my mind running. I'm surprised that there would still be much weight left in it after the cast tables and accessories have come off it - is the body pretty hefty then? I thought it...
  10. glynster

    Moving a big table saw on my own

    Hi, I'm after getting a decent saw, I have a few options I like from the Axminster Industrial saw to the Xcalibur. My concerns are that I would need to get the saw around the side of the house over soft and uneven ground - and I would almost definitely have to do it on my own (the missus swore...
  11. glynster

    Arched top door - what do you call this joint?

    I'm thinking of making some Tudor-esque curved/arched top doors for my home and I have seen a few period examples (example below) where the top rail is mortised into the stiles at an angle - like a kind of open haunched joint - does anybody know the proper name of this type of joint so I can...
  12. glynster

    Do I really need a router?

    Stick around and give it 18 months and you'll be posting "Do I really need 14 routers?" To which the correct answer is always "you need just one more" BTW the Festool of 1010 is as quiet as a hairdryer
  13. glynster

    No words!

    I like how he wears a single glove - you know - for safety!
  14. glynster

    wood tannins

    You can do a fairly rough but informative test between woods by applying the same mixture of Bicarbonate of Soda and watching the colour change - the more tanins a wood has the darker and more aged it will go. A fairly good indicator of what it will look like fumed - and I have a test piece over...
  15. glynster

    Home made belt sander power supply.

    I meant buying the treadmill purely to pillage its motor and any other mechanisms or electronics you might need - you could pick one up on a Saturday, rip out its motor and have it at the tip late that day. In fact, these days, you could leave it at the end of your drive and the scrap monkeys...
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