Mike G":2x8p84mo said:Do you know, it's never occured to me to use Araldite on wood. I can't imagine why it wouldn't work, though, and the open time would be just about forever. Good idea, Rob!
Cabinetman":1g3qa42x said:That’s looking really nice Nick, how did you cut the lid? On the table saw? That’s the way I’ve always done it before. Ian
Mike G":15x6vn99 said:Great stuff, Nick. It is of course cheating to have a table saw, so can you go back to the beginning and do it again properly. :lol: :lol:
Woodbloke":12oxvsme said:As a suggestion for the next one, which needs as Mike says, to be a 'proper job' :eusa-whistle: what's normally done is to have a small, single dovetail within the lid and allow a little more (3mm) in the pin where the saw kerf will be.
The Zebrano Toolbox? - RobNickM":33jc1hxk said:... I’m loosely following a Matt Estlea design for this one. It does look neat when the lid is closed.
Woodbloke":1ec3sl45 said:The Zebrano Toolbox? - RobNickM":1ec3sl45 said:... I’m loosely following a Matt Estlea design for this one. It does look neat when the lid is closed.




There's no need to screw anything in. You could consider making a lining of solid wood machined to, say, 3 - 5 mm thick, and of a width from the top surface of the box's base to the point where you want the bottom of the tray to rest, and a length something longer than sum of the internal length of each of the four sides. Then cut the lining into four pieces, mitre both ends of each piece so that the sharp 45º ends of each lining piece match the internal length of each side. Insert all four pieces and they become, if done well, pretty much self locking. Rest your tray on top of the installed lining. Slainte.NickM":2u75bvb2 said:I'm wondering how to fix the support pieces to the internal sides of the box. I'd like to glue them, but the insides of the box were oiled and waxed earlier in the process. Are screws the only option?
Richard":3j3xhv2c said:There's no need to screw anything in. You could consider making a lining of solid wood machined to, say, 3 - 5 mm thick, and of a width from the top surface of the box's base to the point where you want the bottom of the tray to rest, and a length something longer than sum of the internal length of each of the four sides. Then cut the lining into four pieces, mitre both ends of each piece so that the sharp 45º ends of each lining piece match the internal length of each side. Insert all four pieces and they become, if done well, pretty much self locking. Rest your tray on top of the installed lining. Slainte.NickM":3j3xhv2c said:I'm wondering how to fix the support pieces to the internal sides of the box. I'd like to glue them, but the insides of the box were oiled and waxed earlier in the process. Are screws the only option?
That's the way I would do it as well...but if those internal mitres are really tight into the corners (and they need to be) you'll only get one shot at inserting them as they're next to impossible to remove. A slightly more refined way of doing it is to scribe and mitre the corners, where only the top say, 6mm is actually mitred. A bit more of a faff to do, but slightly easier to fit - RobNickM":iirkwrb7 said:Richard":iirkwrb7 said:There's no need to screw anything in. You could consider making a lining of solid wood machined to, say, 3 - 5 mm thick, and of a width from the top surface of the box's base to the point where you want the bottom of the tray to rest, and a length something longer than sum of the internal length of each of the four sides. Then cut the lining into four pieces, mitre both ends of each piece so that the sharp 45º ends of each lining piece match the internal length of each side. Insert all four pieces and they become, if done well, pretty much self locking. Rest your tray on top of the installed lining. Slainte.NickM":iirkwrb7 said:I'm wondering how to fix the support pieces to the internal sides of the box. I'd like to glue them, but the insides of the box were oiled and waxed earlier in the process. Are screws the only option?
Thanks for the suggestion. I did wonder if that might be an option.
Woodbloke":1ids7wgz said:That's the way I would do it as well...but if those internal mitres are really tight into the corners (and they need to be) you'll only get one shot at inserting them as they're next to impossible to remove. A slightly more refined way of doing it is to scribe and mitre the corners, where only the top say, 6mm is actually mitred. A bit more of a faff to do, but slightly easier to fit - Rob
AndyT":1tet50nb said:One more option for you. Less wood, less work and it wouldn't cover up as much of your excellent work. On the other hand, it might look like an unplanned afterthought.
Make four "posts" of suitable height. They could be quite slender, and would look better if planed down so they were right-angle triangular in cross section. Glue one in each corner, standing upright, to hold a tray on its corners.
This would be long grain against cross-grain, but if you used a solvent based glue such as Uhu, it would have a little bit of give in it if movement was ever an issue. And it would stand a chance of sticking to your finished surfaces. (You could test this first on an offcut.)
Alternatively, make two or three or more trays, so they sit on each other and fill the box like trays of chocolates. All could be lifted out and sorted through, which might be easier than rummaging at the bottom of a deep box.






Tiresias":3lq8ocjf said:Essentially the same as some one above (Rob?) suggested – only the top of the supports is mitred.
NickM":2z4suwjn said:Another option I have in the back of my mind is some sliding trays which capture, and are captured by, the side supports. I think the Warrington Tool Chest you brought to our attention had something like that. That may be a bit of a faff though, and I'm not sure my chest is large enough to warrant it (it would all be a bit fiddly to operate).
Tiresias":18a21t0n said:This is what I did for a similar problem (it was to support a drop in top rather than a tray, but same principle).
Ply sides inside the box proper.
View attachment 5
Thin strips of oak to top.
View attachment 4
Insert, mark, cut.
View attachment 3
View attachment 2
View attachment 1
And voila.
Essentially the same as some one above (Rob?) suggested – only the top of the supports is mitred. The sides essentially keep themselves in place. If you were worried a small area of finish in the centre of each side could be stripped and a dot of glue used. If you do that over only a small area there should be no worries about differential movement. Really those sides aren’t going anywhere.
Of course I knew I was going to line it. Hence the ply. But you could veneer it to make a nicer inside surface. Actually, perhaps my lining counts as a veneer. A skill I didn’t know I had.