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  1. Bob Smalser

    Cruiser Was A Logger's Dog

    “Cruiser” was a logger’s dog, and a tough-looking Bulldog at that. In the forests along Hood Canal where he died 75 years ago, he could have been little else, as a timber cruiser is the woodsman who ranges out ahead of a logging crew to select and mark the trees to be harvested. His grave...
  2. Bob Smalser

    New Life for an Old Saw – Advanced Filing and Restoration

    Sounds great. I can fix some twists, but not all. Beginning with the lightest blow possible is key, because once a spot is hit too many times, the steel compacts and distorts irreversibly.
  3. Bob Smalser

    New Life for an Old Saw – Advanced Filing and Restoration

    I haven't mastered twist yet. Few have.
  4. Bob Smalser

    Brown Rot, White Rot and other Wood Pestilence.

    Thanks. I tweaked it accordingly.
  5. Bob Smalser

    Brown Rot, White Rot and other Wood Pestilence.

    Lichens Interesting and sometimes colorful little algae-fungus combinations that are generally harmless and can be brushed off. Blue Mold and Ambrosia Beetles You’ll find Blue Mold (or Blue Stain) without Ambrosia Beetles but you’ll never find Ambrosia Beetles without the stain. Various...
  6. Bob Smalser

    Brown Rot, White Rot and other Wood Pestilence.

    When excavation reaches the incipient stage of only discoloration of otherwise sound wood, CPES (an epoxy sealer) may be useful to isolate the remaining spores and reduce the wood’s potential to absorb moisture prior to replacing the structure lost to the rot. White Rot Sometimes called...
  7. Bob Smalser

    Brown Rot, White Rot and other Wood Pestilence.

    Grow, mill and airdry enough lumber, plus restore several old boats and you eventually get to see it all, so I’ve saved some examples of pest damage to show you what’s what, what’s bad, what’s not, what you can do about it, and some why’s and wherefores. I’ll start with the worst. Brown Rot...
  8. Bob Smalser

    There's a bullet in my wood!!!

    Actually, it's normally used as firewood. It's mostly and understory tree that twists to reach the sun and makes poor lumber, although turners like it. This tree growing in full sun was an exception.
  9. Bob Smalser

    There's a bullet in my wood!!!

    Lead and copper cut safely and aren't a problem. The problem is the nail that help up the target. ;) A railroad spike 20' up the tree probably used to hold a lantern some time in the 1930's was a problem too, as it was in the second log and I only used the metal detector on the lower log...
  10. Bob Smalser

    Only with Jorgies

    That FOHC (free of heart center) Doug Fir 6X12 is 21' long. Drop on over this weekend and we'll fall and mill a few for ya. Bring an appropriate lorry. ;)
  11. Bob Smalser

    Only with Jorgies

    A Chistmas gift for Betty. Just don't ask which Christmas, as it has 18 corners instead of the 4 I had in mind. ;) Techniques for setting beams without a helper may be useful to others some day.
  12. Bob Smalser

    Only with Jorgies

    Jorgenson, the heavy-duty cast iron and steel American clamp popular with boatbuilders.
  13. Bob Smalser

    a question for bob smalser

    "Square" is always a line athwartships from measurements down the inside of each side of the hull equidistant from the stem. "Plumb" is usually a line 90 degrees to the floors, the framing members the sole are attached to. Plumbing is one of the few uses for a framing square, but better...
  14. Bob Smalser

    Scribe-fitting Difficult Profiles

    If you don't get it perfect with the Dremel or Fordham tool, you can bed in thickened epoxy dyed to match your stain.
  15. Bob Smalser

    Scribe-fitting Difficult Profiles

    Thanks, but 100-year-old Doug Fir, actually. There's probably still rock salt piled on shelves between plank and ceiling, too. ;) Today we use borates.
  16. Bob Smalser

    Scribe-fitting Difficult Profiles

    Ever have to scribe fit a kitchen cabinet to fit a wavy and out-of-plumb wall? How about fitting a bulkhead or partition-wall panel into the inside hull of a yacht or ship? Can you scribe fit a curve as high as 7 feet and as deep as 3 feet? And in a space where nothing is square, little is...
  17. Bob Smalser

    sawing green oak

    Over here replacement blades for induction-hardened saws cost between 20 and 50 dollars depending on the quality of the saw. That'd get old in a real hurry around my house. If you're going to do much of this, it isn't difficult to learn how to file saws, and a couple 5-point Disston D-8 or...
  18. Bob Smalser

    Two Filing Horses

    When not on the road in a tool roll, I store my files and spares in a lead-weighted block to prevent confusion and keep them from touching each other, but I like a small bin on the horse for the jointer and saw sets. A few drain holes in the bin are useful to brush out file shavings or water...
  19. Bob Smalser

    Two Filing Horses

    The first storm of the year with 4 inches of rain gave me an excuse to get under cover for a day and make a taller horse for saw filing. Either I’m getting taller or my eyes are getting worse, and the horse I copied from one of my uncle’s and have been using for almost 40 years now is a bit too...
  20. Bob Smalser

    New Life for an Old Saw – Advanced Filing and Restoration

    The revised copy based on questions has been posted as an edit.
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