Category Archives: Shop stuff

A tip to save a few pennies…

on band aids!

I teach a couple of classes at Woodcraft, and in the ones we use chisels, I’m extremely conscious of the fact that we are wielding a piece of razor sharp steel on the end of nice long lever that can do some real damage. My tip, is to hold the chisel by the tip, when you are doing handwork.

photo 1 Holding the chisel back at the handle and trying to push it through the wood, is an invitation to put your other hand on the far side of the piece. As Rob Cosman has pointed out  – that means everything up to the hilt is likely to go through the body part you put in front of the chisel. Instead, use your power hand to act as the hilt (limited the depth) and keep your fingers out of the way using a grip like this:photo 3photo 2

 

Notice two things in this grip – my forefinger is placed below the blade tip, and acts as a fulcrum – and my thumb is choked up on the blade almost to the tip. (Update: Doug Needham points out that the same approach can be used with the off hand if you use one hand on the handle for a more powerful cut – either way, you keep your soft parts behind the cutting edge).  The idea is to keep the amount of cutting steel visible, to at or below what I need. Rob’s tip on this is that doing it this way is a stitch – doing it the other way is flowers (or taps!).

 

New switch on the table saw

Woodworking Safety Day May 17, 2014

Woodworking Safety Day May 17, 2014

Big shout out to the MWA for taking on stewardship of Woodworking Safety Week. And thank you Marc Spagnolo for running it all these years!

I replaced the power switch on my table saw last night. It turned out to be more complicated than I thought, but still not very hard. The problem I was encountering was simply that the off setting wasn’t really engaging properly. That left the On switch feeling very touchy. On a couple of occasions I had to hit the off switch paddle a couple times to get the saw to turn off and stay off. And one time – I hit the off button, and after I left the area I bumped the table, and the saw turned back on! That was when I placed an order for a new switch. I found this one from Amazon Woodstock D4151

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Dang it!

Ever do something stupid in your shop?

I have a molding plane set that I purchased from Time Warp Tool Works a while back. The
photo 1 (12) rabbet plane chattered quite a bit when I first tried it out, and the reason was that the blade didn’t bed properly. The blade tang was probably bent when I was trying to remove it the first time I went to sharpen it – I can only guess it was because I tapped it too hard when I was trying to drive it in to loosen the wedge.

 

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Table Saw clean-up/fix-up

201404 Table Saw cleanup 1The table saw in my shop is a General International 50-075L185M1 (No, it’s not a saw stop, but that is on my radar now that I have grandkids starting to play in the shop with me). It’s a contractor style that I’ve built into a cabinet with a router table. Unfortunately, the base peice is a sheet of 3/4″ MDF braced with 2×4’s – which has started to delaminate after 6 years. This clean-up may result in a bigger project 🙂

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Cleaning up the planer

My planer is my apprentice. I like doing things with hand tools, but thickness planing is really a workout. I can do it, and when the wood is too wide for the planer, depending on the circumstances, I will handle the thicknessing by hand. For the other 99.9% of the stuff – its through my loud, dusty, and well loved lunch box planer.

About 4 years ago, the lot next to my parents was developed for several houses. We talked with the developer, and managed to go through and mark a number of cherry trees that we wanted to purchase. The developer cut down the trees, cleaned up the trunks, and hauled the logs to the side of the road. We had the wood milled at a local sawyer (Herbine Hardwoods) and split the booty between kiln drying and air drying in our driveway. I’ve put most of the wood (> 2K linear feet) through my planer. It’s taken quite a beating over the years.

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