The Woodshop Shed

adventures in woodworking and home maintenance, from my shop in an oversized backyard shed

January 2021
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Yin Yang centerpiece / serving boards

Furnished content.
(from Lumberjocks.com)


Yin Yang centerpiece / serving boardsThis project was requested by a friend that was looking for a centerpiece featuring the Yin Yang symbol with the holes being large enough to accommodate her candles in jars.This centerpiece can also be taken apart, and used as two charcuterie boards as well. That means the walnut and maple is finished with a food safe finish of mineral oil and bees wax.My big concern with this project was a line down the center true to the symbol with smooth curves that mate well together. I used a template cut using a laser cutter, and then a router with a flush trim bit to accomplish this. I created a blog to describe the process and challenges encountered: https://www.lumberjocks.com/BillGo/blog/132076



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posted at: 12:00am on 21-Jan-2021
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Night Table

Furnished content.
(from Lumberjocks.com)


Night TableHi:Today I finally completed a night table for my wife. Have been working on it off and on for three weeks.Made with Red Oak top, drawer faces, sides and shelf and White Oak barrel staves. Drawer handles from Lee Valley Tools.36 wide and 22 deep, standing 29 tall.The table top reveals 1/4 sawn red oak boards, a full 1-1/2 thick.The lower shelf features a barrel stave stop across the back edge. Inner drawers made from Baltic birch.This turned out to be a rather heavy piece of furniture but nice and solid!Thank for looking :-)Bill



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posted at: 12:00am on 21-Jan-2021
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Coping Sled for the Router Table

Furnished content.
(from Lumberjocks.com)


Coping Sled for the Router TableI've got some projects coming up that'll require quite a bit of coping, and I've had poor results in the past, so I decided that I wanted a coping sled. I'm a cheap-as——uh, I'm selective with what I spend my money on and I decided that I wasn't interested in buying a sled at the asking prices at Woodcraft or Rockler, let alone Woodpeckers or Infinity.There's not a lot, material-wise, that goes in to the sled and I had much of it on hand.I started with a 14” x 8” piece of 3/4” ply for the base. The size was primarily determined by what felt secure and comfortable on my router table. A 2” wide piece of 3/4” was used for the fixed fence and another small piece was used for the sliding stop block. A dado was cut in to the base to accept the T-track. The T-track, t-nut and threaded knobs were left over from previous projects.For the guide, I had some .220” thick, clear acrylic sitting around, too. It's 18” wide, which gives me a 2” overhang on each side of the base. I cut it to 3.5” deep and set it overhang the business end of the base by 1.5”- I can't imagine that I'll need more coping depth than that, not in the foreseeable future, at least. I cut the corners of the near side of the sheet at 60 to make it less pokey.I picked up some 1-3/4” long 3/8”-16 coupling nuts to use as stand-offs for the acrylic runner/guide. 1” long hex head bolts are countersunk through the bottom of the base and another pair of bolts thread in to the top of the coupling nuts to hold the guide. I added an extra set of washers between the coupling nuts and acrylic sheet to shim the sheet up slightly so that it would run on the aluminum extrusion of my fence, rather than on the movable faces.The handles are comprised of countersunk 3” long 3/8-16 bolts, another set of 3/8” coupling nuts, some washers and rubbery threaded knobs.The workpiece clamp is a self-adjusting Armor clamp, medium-sized so that it can reach over the sacrificial piece. There is no clamp for the sacrificial block – I don't really have room for one and, with the side pressure from the sliding stop block, it hasn't moved in testing. I might add a strip of sandpaper to the face of the permanent fence as a little extra insurance to keep the sacrificial pieces in place, though.The only critical part of set-up was squaring the acrylic guide/runner to the fence on the base. To do this, I drilled one of the holes in the acrylic slightly over-sized to allow enough play to adjust by a few degrees. To set it square, I held my 12” combination square against the sled's base fence with the blade against the router fence face and then snugged the runner up to the router fence.In use, I'm really happy – setting up the pieces is easy, it holds them securely, it keeps my hands further away from the spinning blades of death and the acrylic guide lets me see the workpiece clearly while also providing some protection from flying stuff.For those interested in some of the parts and where to acquire them:- The .220” acrylic sheet was originally purchased at Menards for 20 bucks – took me forever to find this stuff up in the doors and windows department
- The 1-3/4” long coupling nuts were also purchased from Menards at about a buck each – they have them in various threadings, so get whatever matches the fasteners that you have on hand
- The Armor clamp was originally purchased at Woodcraft for $25, though less fancy ones (that don't auto adjust for workpiece height) can be purchased inexpensively on Amazon.



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posted at: 12:00am on 21-Jan-2021
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