Walney Col
Established Member
I first came across this idea a couple of years ago (see http://lumberjocks.com/projects/53294 and http://lumberjocks.com/Leldon/blog/25317)
but the plans mentioned in the blog appear to have disapeared so reverse-engineering how it was made I've come up with a design of my own.
NB. This drawing is only a low resolution copy... please download the full sized version from the link at the end of this post.
My design was sized at 29cm x 19cm (and comes out at 9cm high) so it could be made from a cheap beech tesco cutting board of which I have several going spare. I've done all the cutting and made usure it fits together but I'm waiting for glue to dry at the mo before I can finish sand it and assemble it. Notable things about this idea are the fact that in spite of it using the stacked-rings approach no internal cuts are necessary, instead each ring is cut through and joined back together using scarf joints. It also employs one particular section of a cut which starts at 0 degrees and ends at 18 degrees which I'd never seen done before.
The full sized version of the drawing is here:- http://www.seafax.co.uk/index.php?id=a- ... saw-basket
Col.
but the plans mentioned in the blog appear to have disapeared so reverse-engineering how it was made I've come up with a design of my own.
NB. This drawing is only a low resolution copy... please download the full sized version from the link at the end of this post.
My design was sized at 29cm x 19cm (and comes out at 9cm high) so it could be made from a cheap beech tesco cutting board of which I have several going spare. I've done all the cutting and made usure it fits together but I'm waiting for glue to dry at the mo before I can finish sand it and assemble it. Notable things about this idea are the fact that in spite of it using the stacked-rings approach no internal cuts are necessary, instead each ring is cut through and joined back together using scarf joints. It also employs one particular section of a cut which starts at 0 degrees and ends at 18 degrees which I'd never seen done before.
The full sized version of the drawing is here:- http://www.seafax.co.uk/index.php?id=a- ... saw-basket
Col.