It is currently 28 Mar 2024, 11:56

Holiday Toolchest

This is where we don't want anything but evidence of your finest wood butchering in all its glorious, and photograph laden glory. Bring your finished products or WIP's, we love them all, so long as there's pictures, and plenty of 'em!

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Andyp » 03 Jun 2022, 16:29

Wooden is going to be heavy isn't it? I would have thought keeping the weight down would be an important consideration.

i think this is a cracking idea BTW.
I do not think therefore I do not am.

cheers
Andy
User avatar
Andyp
Petrified Pine
 
Posts: 11712
Joined: 22 Jul 2014, 07:05
Location: 14860 Normandy, France
Name: Andy

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Woodster » 03 Jun 2022, 16:56

For transportation I’ve always rather liked this idea.

Image

Or you could go more rustic? :lol:

Image
User avatar
Woodster
Old Oak
 
Posts: 2558
Joined: 26 Jan 2017, 13:17
Location: Dorset
Name:

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 03 Jun 2022, 17:47

Cabinetman wrote:Trouble is the higher it is the more it will move, mentioned this before, 36” long 8”wide top and 18” high.
Another idea for the melting pot.
The attachment B81B3D0C-5FDB-4C42-922B-25EE8B7A6DC3.jpeg is no longer available


Yes, that's certainly a concern. I've honestly no idea what I'll do yet: I may well make something, decide it's rubbish and then make something else (and then rinse and repeat!)

I like the idea of the Moravian thing suggested by BucksDad, but it would need scaling down quite considerably to be easy enough to lift on my own and get into the car without taking too much of the available space. I can also see the benefit of something I can sit on (to add rigidity) as long as the ergonomics end up okay (which I doubt they will!). One thing that could work in my favour is the toolchest being the top workbench surface for most things: that'll move the height of the "bench" up by the height of the toolchest, which will probably help my back a bit.

All needs a lot more thought...

Andyp wrote:Wooden is going to be heavy isn't it? I would have thought keeping the weight down would be an important consideration.


That is definitely a consideration, but I don't know how important. I'll be moving it around by car mostly, so as long as I can easily lift the constituent parts and put it together quickly, it should be okay I think. I don't mind the idea that I'll have multiple trips back and forth to load the car up.

Woodster wrote:For transportation I’ve always rather liked this idea.

Image


That actually looks relatively similar to (but more polished than) what I've used for this trip. I wanted something I could knock together very quickly and settled on a three-level thing to go in a Makita tool box. You can see the layers spread out in this photo:

toolbox_layers.jpg
(111.47 KiB)


and a close-up of one layer:

toolbox_layer.jpg
(57.2 KiB)


As you can see, it's just made up of some plywood sheets with scraps of plywood nailed into place to keep things from moving around. There are some lengths of dowel screwed to each piece to separate he layers and to act as handles to lift the layers out of the Makita box (the one shown in the close-up above is the top layer, so they're just acting as handles, hence only needing two). For transit I oiled all the metal bits and chucked lots of silica gel packets in for good measure.

The marking gauge you can see on the left of that picture is quite a handy one for travel: it has a flat brass face and two rollers, so you can use it against a flat edge or a curved surface and it has replaceable heads: a couple of normal wheel things and a cross-drilled thing that'll accept either a pin or a pencil. It seemed a good choice for travel as it can act as either a wheel marking gauge or a pin marking gauge (I can't imagine me cutting many mortices while on holiday!)

Woodster wrote:Or you could go more rustic? :lol:

Image


That's rather lovely (and way more artistic than I'm capable of), but it wouldn't help much with my desire to have a combined toolchest and work surface. I'd love to be able to make something akin to that though!
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Woodster » 04 Jun 2022, 15:59

This popped up on Pinterest - I’m sure I’ve got an old saw somewhere … :lol:

Some folks come up with some clever ideas. ;)

Image
User avatar
Woodster
Old Oak
 
Posts: 2558
Joined: 26 Jan 2017, 13:17
Location: Dorset
Name:

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 04 Jun 2022, 17:46

Another practice today (I made the tails a bit long for the pin board really, but it worked okay anyway, surprisingly):

as_cut.jpg
(27.33 KiB)


... and with an attempt to hide the gap:

bodged.jpg
(24.65 KiB)


In many ways, these seem easier than standard dovetails. They're a bit more tedious as you can't saw out the waste in the pin board, but that means there's no accurate sawing required. Only having one joint face visible also hides all manner of sins!

I'm still slightly daunted by the idea of cutting 16 of these joints (plus 16 normal dovetails) reasonably accurately in order to make the drawers for my tool chest...
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 09 Jun 2022, 17:38

One of the fun things about trying to do woodwork away from my garage has been finding ways to repurpose stools, side tables and such-like as temporary tool holding places. One of the plastic outdoor chairs at the cottage has worked very well as a handy chisel rack:

chisel_rack.jpg
(62.05 KiB)


After a few goes moving stuff outside, chasing the shade around the garden and then moving stuff back in again, I decided to set up in the corner inside:

working_inside.jpg
(62.64 KiB)


Alas, it's time to head back to Blighty tomorrow, so I've had to pack everything away. I've only been woodworking very intermittently (between doing more conventional holiday stuff :lol: ), but I've really enjoyed having the stuff here so I could potter at it in odd bits of free time. It's convinced me that doing woodwork on holiday is viable and that it's worth making a better tool chest to make it easier.

As the tool chest thing is going to involve a LOT of dovetailed corners (four for the bottom chest thing plus 20 through dovetails and 20 half-blind ones for the 10 drawers; I haven't even thought about the top part yet!), I thought I'd use my time in France to get lots of dovetail practice in, so I made this lot all at the same time (12 dovetailed corners in total):

three_boxes.jpg
(57.01 KiB)


The shadows on that top box look really weird (almost Escher-like!) in that photo... I promise I haven't broken any laws of physics while making the boxes :D

There are gaps here and there and there were definitely one or two things that didn't go quite to plan, but I'm really pleased overall and I've definitely learnt a few things along the way.

Close-up:

close_up.jpg
(40.56 KiB)


Top and bottom "boxes" are greenheart (probably) and ash (definitely); the middle one is cherry and sweet chestnut.

top_view.jpg
(34.42 KiB)


As you might be able to see in this view, they are just (unglued) frames at the moment. I haven't thought about bases or lids to make them into boxes or whatever (I just wanted to practise the dovetails); that'll have to be something I think about when I get home.
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Lurker » 09 Jun 2022, 19:56

They are excellent…….. what did your wife make?
Lurker
Old Oak
 
Posts: 2447
Joined: 26 Nov 2020, 10:15
Location: Loughborough
Name:

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 09 Jun 2022, 20:33

Lurker wrote:They are excellent…….. what did your wife make?


She's always got lots of knitting and crochet projects on the go, but I must confess: I slightly lose track of what's what :oops:
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Cabinetman » 09 Jun 2022, 21:37

Just shows, it’s true what practice makes! Suggest you look back at your first attempt and see how far you’ve come.
Cabinetman
Old Oak
 
Posts: 3195
Joined: 11 Oct 2020, 07:32
Location: Lincolnshire Wolds + Pennsylvania
Name: Ian

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Phil » 10 Jun 2022, 07:43

Those look really good 8-)


Cabinetman wrote:Just shows, it’s true what practice makes!


Fully agree on that one, don't think I will be publishing my very easy straight forward box joints :oops:
We don't stop woodworking because we grow old, we grow old because we stop woodworking!

https://www.instagram.com/phil_pretoria/
User avatar
Phil
Old Oak
 
Posts: 3499
Joined: 23 Jul 2014, 05:11
Location: Southern Africa 0054
Name: Phil

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 10 Jun 2022, 07:47

Cabinetman wrote:Just shows, it’s true what practice makes! Suggest you look back at your first attempt and see how far you’ve come.


Thanks Ian, although some of the credit has to go to the 3D printed saw jigs! They make it a heck of a lot easier.

One thing that made a big difference was clamping (with some little spring clamps) a thick-ish steel rule to the tail board (flush with the bottom of the tails) when offering it up to mark the pins. The rule provides a solid edge to push up to the pin board so it's not necessary to faff around trying to align the two boards (looking for light through the fibres or whatever). I'd always found this step a bit hit and miss, but with the ruler clamped to the tail board, it was quick and every joint seems to have been spot on.
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Andyp » 10 Jun 2022, 09:22

I cant think of a better way to pass the time on holiday. Wish I could get away with it.
I do not think therefore I do not am.

cheers
Andy
User avatar
Andyp
Petrified Pine
 
Posts: 11712
Joined: 22 Jul 2014, 07:05
Location: 14860 Normandy, France
Name: Andy

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 21 Jan 2023, 13:18

I've been very quiet regarding this project for quite a long time, but believe it or not, I haven't given up on it. I've just been pondering the design quite a bit and still haven't quite reached any conclusions. Of course, I also wanted to give AndyT a run for his money in the "slowest project ever" competition :D

Anyway, after dillying and dallying and never quite concluding how best to do things, I decided yesterday to just get started and figure things out as I go. Off the racks came the bits of sweet chestnut I'd bought from Wentwood last year and I decided to cut them up a bit and see what happens. I had a few pieces, each a bit under 3 m long and about 200 mm wide. They weren't especially straight and each had a substantial bow across the width. Rather than trying to flatten the pieces out, I figured it would be best to cut them up lengthways into three pieces, each of which would be somewhere near flat and in some cases the outer two pieces would be close to quarter sawn, which might be beneficial I guess.

I started by cutting all the pieces in half to make them a bit more manageable (at the very least, they'd fit on my bench that way!). That gave me a small pile of pieces between 1.3 and 1.5 m long.

Then I got my extra large (300 mm) ryoba (seen on the left of this image next to the "normal" size one) and started ripping the planks into pieces. After pondering on a few different ways of doing this, I settled on holding the wood vertically in the bench vice:

sawing_1_800.jpg
(140.14 KiB)


There was a bit of wobble in the board at the start of the cut, where it's about 500 mm above the bench, but once I was down to about 300 mm above the bench, the cut proceeded very quickly. If I had any sense, I probably would have put my portable workbench on the bench to lift the clamping point up a bit higher. Well, if I really had any sense, I would have used the bandsaw, but that's another story...

Working in the vice like that seemed to be a good choice as it kept my back in a comfortable position and after spending a few hours cutting yesterday I didn't have even the slightest twinge, which is a bit of a luxury for someone of my height (1.98 m / 6'6").

As I cut, I moved the pieces further up in the vice and very quickly ripped along the length. That big ryoba works really well for this sort of cut. In the past I'd mostly used it for resawing (which wasn't fun by any stretch of the imagination), but that's a job I'll definitely do in the bandsaw in future.

When the workpiece hit the ceiling, I could go no further in the vice, so for the first "batch" of boards that I cut, I clamped them to the bench and the vice (with the vice out a bit so the cut line was over the edge of the bench) and completed the cut like that (in some cases I also squatted on the floor so I could pull down rather than pull up to cut):

sawing_end_on_bench.jpg
(142.13 KiB)


That was less comfortable for my back, but it worked okay. For someone at my level of experience and skill (which is to say, not very much), it was really satisfying to get to the end of all of the 1.5ish metre cuts I did within a millimetre or two of the line.

After a couple of hours sawing away with the garage door wide open but without feeling the cold at all (unsurprisingly consider what I was doing), I ended up with a pile of planks that looked like this:

pile_yesterday.jpg
(188.91 KiB)


Some of them are straight but some (the ones from the middle of the planks) have a taper on them due to the shape of the source planks and the fact I wanted the edge pieces to be straight.

This morning I got on with remove the edges from the 5 planks that still had bark on. Again this proceeded fairly quickly and mostly in the same way:

sawing_edge_1.jpg
(130.63 KiB)


The only difference with these ones was that I decided to saw the last bit underneath the bench so I could continue to look after my back and stand in a relatively straight manner:

sawing_under_bench.jpg
(171.33 KiB)


The result: a pile of straight planks on the bench and a stack of slightly tapered ones leaning up against the portable workbench...

planks_1.jpg
(184.63 KiB)


... the next step is to decide what to do with this lot:

planks_2.jpg
(163.4 KiB)


They're a mixture of completely unplaned and planed on one side but bowed a bit since planing. None of them sit on the bench completely flat in any orientation.

One option now is to get them sitting somewhere near flat and then feed them through the thicknesser. That would be quick, easy and very much in keeping with my skill level, but would be noisy, dusty and unless I stop shy of the thickness I want, would waste a bit at each end of each plank as a result of the snipe.

Another option is to do everything by hand, in which case I'll probably cut them to length first (as I won't have to worry about snipe) so I've got easier bits to manage (and less to throw away if I completely c*ck up the hand planing!)

I think I'll probably start by doing one or two pieces by hand and then deciding what to do for the rest based on how it goes. Some of the pieces are a lot thicker (30 mm vs about 23 mm), so they may go through the thicknesser to get rid of the bulk, even if I do the last bit by hand to be sure of no snipe.

Do I get any awards for the most boring collection of photos in any single forum post?
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby AndyT » 21 Jan 2023, 13:34

Not boring at all - this is real life woodworking, in a limited space, exploring different possibilities and extending your skills.

That's far better than some carefully staged video demonstration designed for clicks, not to help other woodworkers.

That big Ryoba looks a very practical option, with the great benefit of knowing that it's properly sharp when you get it. And presumably not outrageously expensive?

As for your pace of work, I don't see anything wrong there! ;)
--------------
Andy
User avatar
AndyT
Old Oak
 
Posts: 2364
Joined: 23 Nov 2020, 19:45
Location: Bristol
Name: Andy

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 21 Jan 2023, 14:44

AndyT wrote:Not boring at all - this is real life woodworking, in a limited space, exploring different possibilities and extending your skills.

That's far better than some carefully staged video demonstration designed for clicks, not to help other woodworkers.


Thanks Andy. Comments like that definitely help with the motivation!

AndyT wrote:That big Ryoba looks a very practical option, with the great benefit of knowing that it's properly sharp when you get it. And presumably not outrageously expensive?


It was £49 (vs £37 for its little brother). I've no idea how long it'll last before it needs a new blade (I don't think Japanese saws are realistically sharpenable), but I imagine it'll be much longer than the little one, which I use much more. It looks like a new blade for the little one is £22.50 (vs a new blade for the small one at £19).

AndyT wrote:As for your pace of work, I don't see anything wrong there! ;)


:D :D :D
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 21 Jan 2023, 15:03

Sticking with the theme of "sometimes you've just got to start and see what happens", I decided to take the thinnest bit of wood and chop it into three pieces:

thinnest_board_chopped.jpg
(116.03 KiB)


The two longer pieces are 560 mm; the shorter one is whatever was left; about 360 mm. The current plan for the chest is to make it 550 mm wide and 300 mm tall, so cutting the piece into those lengths should work quite well I think. It'll be 350ish mm deep, so each face will be made up of several pieces joined together.

Next up was to clamp it with my dog hole tail vice and start cleaning up the first face:

tail_vice.jpg
(174.27 KiB)


I used my simple winding sticks (just some lengths of 2020 extrusion I pulled out of a skip) to check for twist:

winding_sticks.jpg
(161.02 KiB)


and gradually worked at it until I was happy that it was flat and untwisted.

I'm aiming for about 20 mm thickness and after checking this first piece (remember that I picked the thinnest board for my first attempt), it was tapered such that one end was only about 18 mm.

I think it was partly that I'd looked (not very closely) at one end and seen some yellowy colour and thought I hadn't planed enough of the saw marks off. Looking at it more closely later, I realised that the yellowy colour was quite deep in the material and is presumably just a characteristic of the wood.

yellowing.jpg
(153.6 KiB)


Rather than carrying on with that one, I thought I'd put it aside for now (I can always use it elsewhere in the project) and get the second 560 mm board out.

That one came flat and untwisted a lot quicker and was thick enough that I thought I stood a chance of getting 20 mm after planing.

I got my pin marking gauge out and set it to 20 mm and then used it to mark all the way round all four sides.

marking_thickness.jpg
(137.53 KiB)


After that I got on with the bit I was most nervous about: planing it to thickness. I've tried this a few times in the past with mixed results (hence buying a thicknesser :) ). I'd like to get better at doing this by hand so I'll use this project as an opportunity to practise (although I'm not ruling out using the thicknesser rather than a scrub plane when there's a lot of stock to remove).

Anyway, after taking it steadily and checking the line very very regularly I got a thicknessed board:

thicknessed.jpg
(101.08 KiB)


Checking with some calipers, the thickness on the corners varied from 20.05 mm to 20.25 mm, which is good enough for me :D

The next job was to stick it in the vice and get the first edge square:

squaring_first_edge.jpg
(183.22 KiB)


I didn't want to move the setting of the pin marking gauge, so I thought this was a perfect opportunity to get out the panel gauge that I picked up late last year in a junk shop:

panel_gauge_marking.jpg
(116.92 KiB)


That gauge was just set to the thickness I thought I could get out of the board rather than a specific target number; I'll work out what thicknesses I want later. I could then work my way down to the line, trying to get it square and at the right thickness all at the same time, which I always find a bit of a challenge. Nevertheless, on this occasion at least, it worked and the board was amazingly about 0.1 mm difference in width across the 560 mm length 8-) - I'm sure that was as much luck as judgement!

Anyway, that's one piece done. There's one more to do out of that plank and another 9 planks; with 3 pieces per plank I've probably got 28 more attempts to get good (or consistently bad :D ) at this. At some point along the process I'll have to work out how many of these I actually need so I don't end up with a huge pile of perfectly squared pieces of completely the wrong length for their intended purpose :)

Anyway, here's a picture of the one board I've done along with all the tools I used:

one_board_done.jpg
(189.58 KiB)
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Malc2098 » 21 Jan 2023, 15:45

Coming along, nicely.
Malcolm
User avatar
Malc2098
Sequoia
 
Posts: 7207
Joined: 03 Jul 2016, 11:10
Location: Tiverton
Name: Malcolm

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby AndyT » 21 Jan 2023, 16:00

Looking good, and I applaud you for having a panel gauge and finding an excuse to use it.

How are you liking the chestnut? I've only used it once, for a simple garden chair, but found it really pleasant to work. An excellent choice for your chest, I'd say.
--------------
Andy
User avatar
AndyT
Old Oak
 
Posts: 2364
Joined: 23 Nov 2020, 19:45
Location: Bristol
Name: Andy

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 21 Jan 2023, 16:29

AndyT wrote:Looking good, and I applaud you for having a panel gauge and finding an excuse to use it.


It was bought on a bit of a whim because I'd never seen one in the flesh as it were (although I knew of their existence). I really like it, although I find the wedge a bit more fussy to set than the screw on my other gauges. When the width being marked is substantially larger than the size of the body of the standard marking gauge, I find the panel gauge much easier to track along the board.

AndyT wrote:How are you liking the chestnut? I've only used it once, for a simple garden chair, but found it really pleasant to work.


It seems very nice to work with so far. I've used it to make a couple of boxes and it seemed nice from that limited try-out. I guess I'll get to know it a lot better over the course of this project.

It's got a lovely smell when it's being sawn. Much less obvious when planing though, although that might just have been my nose getting too cold to smell anything!

AndyT wrote:An excellent choice for your chest, I'd say.


Well, it was your suggestion :lol:
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 21 Jan 2023, 17:04

AndyT wrote:I've only used it once, for a simple garden chair, but found it really pleasant to work.


What's it like for something like a garden chair? How does it stand up to weather? Did you treat it with anything and if so, how often does it need attention?

The reason I ask all those questions is that I want to have a go at making a garden table at some point to replace our glass topped one that's getting a bit shabby and also gets unpleasantly shiny in bright weather. I'd wondered about either making one out of sweet chestnut or trying to source some western red cedar, so I'd be very interested to hear how chestnut stands up to outdoor use.
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby AndyT » 21 Jan 2023, 17:34

It's lasting very well. The chair stays outside except for the winter time, when it comes indoors.

I could have left the wood unfinished, but I chose to varnish it. I used Le Tonkinois, which is excellent stuff. (It's used a lot on wooden boats, including Tally Ho.) It's a soft varnish which can stretch or shrink with the wood movement.

I've touched it up a bit this winter. There was a bit of deterioration on some horizontal surfaces and where the neighbours cats like to scratch, but on the whole the chair is keeping its nice light colour.
--------------
Andy
User avatar
AndyT
Old Oak
 
Posts: 2364
Joined: 23 Nov 2020, 19:45
Location: Bristol
Name: Andy

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Cabinetman » 21 Jan 2023, 18:18

You’ve put a lot of hard work into those (and the wip thank you) I do feel you need a plan to work to though, it would be a shame after all that if you couldn’t do what you wanted. But coming on well!
Cabinetman
Old Oak
 
Posts: 3195
Joined: 11 Oct 2020, 07:32
Location: Lincolnshire Wolds + Pennsylvania
Name: Ian

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Malc2098 » 21 Jan 2023, 18:25

I used to turn a lot of Chestnut at school back in the 60s. It always came up well.

Chestnut is also cleft for fencing, so it is intended to last outdoors untreated.
Malcolm
User avatar
Malc2098
Sequoia
 
Posts: 7207
Joined: 03 Jul 2016, 11:10
Location: Tiverton
Name: Malcolm

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 21 Jan 2023, 18:30

AndyT wrote:It's lasting very well. The chair stays outside except for the winter time, when it comes indoors.

I could have left the wood unfinished, but I chose to varnish it. I used Le Tonkinois, which is excellent stuff. (It's used a lot on wooden boats, including Tally Ho.) It's a soft varnish which can stretch or shrink with the wood movement.

I've touched it up a bit this winter. There was a bit of deterioration on some horizontal surfaces and where the neighbours cats like to scratch, but on the whole the chair is keeping its nice light colour.


Thanks, that's really useful. On that basis, I'm definitely tempted to use sweet chestnut for the table. It'll only be a small and fairly simple thing (given space constraints both in the workshop and in the garden), but that's good as it might be within my capabilities!

Cabinetman wrote:You’ve put a lot of hard work into those (and the wip thank you) I do feel you need a plan to work to though, it would be a shame after all that if you couldn’t do what you wanted. But coming on well!


Thanks. I do have a vague plan (hence the rough dimensions I've mentioned. It's going to be a drawer unit with some means of clamping stuff on the top or on the back. It's never going to be as stiff as a proper workbench, but hopefully it'll be okay. There are lots of details still to flesh out, but all being well it'll probably end up looking a bit like this:

model_front_2023-01-21.jpg
(59.29 KiB)


model_rear_2023-01-21.jpg
(52.15 KiB)


The main change from that model is that I'm going to change the right-hand set of drawers so that there's a deep one at the bottom. It occurred to me that if I don't take the #5 or LA jack plane with me and make sure the biggest plane is a #4 (which should be fine for the sort of stuff I'm likely to get up to on holiday), then it an go in the base unit rather than needing to be in a separate top box. I'm not completely convinced I'll get everything else in that base section, but it's certainly worth a try.
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

Re: Holiday Toolchest

Postby Dr.Al » 21 Jan 2023, 18:30

Malc2098 wrote:I used to turn a lot of Chestnut at school back in the 60s. It always came up well.

Chestnut is also cleft for fencing, so it is intended to last outdoors untreated.


Good to know, thanks.
My projects website: https://www.cgtk.co.uk
User avatar
Dr.Al
Old Oak
 
Posts: 1964
Joined: 31 Dec 2020, 10:11
Location: Dursley, Gloucestershire
Name: Al

PreviousNext

Return to Projects & WIP

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests