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Strona startowa Flawiusz Józef - Historia Żydowska, Pisma chrześcijańskie i pokrewne, Józef Flawiusz File Cabinet - 2 drawer Lateral File cabinet with matching printer cabinet, Woodworking Plans Fine-Home-Building-25-Years-of-Great-Building-Tips-Malestrom, Building and Architecture Formative Texts in the History of Zen Buddhism, @Buddhism Fragment traktatu welawsko-bydgoskiego z 1657, Historia, Prawo, Traktaty, Umowy, Kroniki, Teksty Żródłowe Film polski - streszczenie, historia filmu polskiego po 1981r Fine Gardening - Grow Healthier & Easier Gardens (2015), !!!Materialy Eng Farago&Zwijnenberg (eds) - Compelling Visuality ~ The work of art in and out of history, sztuka i nie tylko po angielsku Fałszywe dokumenty Gorbaczowa. Kilka faktów o Katyniu, Historia Furet F. Prawdziwy koniec rewolucji francuskiej, Historia Francji |
Fine Woodworking 032, papermodels, historica[ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]JANUARy/FEBRUAY 1982, No. 32, $3.00 ill1 1 • CaJedBirds Good information never goes out of date. That's why we keep all our back issues in print. 10 18 Tapered Sliding Dovetails, 25 Checkered Bowls, Tramp Art, Hand Planes, Carving Desin Deci sions, Marquetry Cutting, Library Ladders, French Polishing, Birch Plywood, ench Stones. Wooden Clockworks, Hammer Veneering, Claw and Ball Feet (history and technique), Hot-Pipe Bending, A Two-Way Hinge, Laminated Turnings, Chain-Saw Carving, Small Workbench. Haunched Mortise and Tenon, Old World Cabinetmaker, Tables, Woodturning Chisels, To Finish the Finish, Cabriole Legs, Paneled Doors and Walls. Sam Maloof, Dust Collection, Bandsaw oxes, Precision Joinery, Butterfly Joint, Pedestal Table, Tuning Up Your Lathe, Finishing Marquetry, The Drawknife. Marquetry Today, Split Turn ings, Eagle Carvings, Hand Dove tails, Mechanical Desks, Antique Tools, Gustav Stickley, Oil/Var nish Mix, Shaker Lap Desk. Gimson and the Barnsleys, Mosaic Door, Clear Finishes, Tall Case Clock, Mitering on the Table Saw, Patternmaking, Woodwork ing Education, Survey of Schools. Spinning Wheels, Turning Spalted Wood, Drawers, Scratch Beader, Leather on Wood, Parsons Tables, Hanging a Door, Dulcimer Peg ox, Notes on Finishing. Wharton Esherick, Toy Trucks, Oyster-Shell Veneering, PE G for t he Woodwar ker, Oil/Varnish Finishes, Chip Carv ing, Mortise and Tenon by Ma chine, The Jointer. Wood, Mortise and Tenon, Hand Shaping, Plane Speaking, Desert Cabinetry, Hidden Drawers, Green Bowls, Queen Anne, Gate-Leg Table, Stroke Sander, Funiture Plans. How Inlay is Made, Inlaying Mother-of-Pearl, A Jigsaw for Pearl, Shaker Blanket Chest, Spline-Mitered Joinery, Coloring with Oils, Chisels, Alan Peters, Basics of the Bandsaw. 4 28 Greene and Greene, Holding the Work, Tambours, Stains, Spindle Turning, Cleaving Wood, Sharpening, Dust-Collection Sys tem, Sanding, Whetstones. Michael Thonet, Shaper Cut ters and Fences, Weaving Cane, Knockdown Tabletops, Japanese Planes, French Polishing, Pigeon hole Desk, Repairing Chairs, Hard wood Sources. 21 Water and Wood, Hidden Beds, Exotic Woods, Veneer, Tackling Carving, Workbench, Ornamental Turning, Heat Treating, Mosaic Roettes, Shaped Tambours. Laminated Bowls, Stock Prep aration, Tung Oil, Relief Carving, Machine Maintenance, End-or ing Jig, Lumber Grading, Shaped Tambours, Index to Issues 1-13. Woden Jointer, Guitar Bind ing and Purfling, Small-Scale Cabi netmaking, Single Bed, Fumed Oak, Decorative Joinery, Cutting Box Joints on Radial-Arm Saw, Coopered Columns. 29 Hans Wegner, Making Sanding Machines, Abrasives, Low-Tech Thickness Sander, Dowel Joints, Dovetailing Carcases, Japanese Saws, Index to Isues 1-20. Stacking, Carcae Construction, Dealing With Plywood, Patch-Pad Cutting, Drying Wood, Gothic Tracery, Guitar Joinery, The owl Gouge, Shaper Knives. George Nakashima, Tapered Lamination, Improving Planes, Box-Joint Jig, World Globe, Koa Table, Incised Lettering, Bolection Turning, Air-Powered Tools. 30 Woodworking in Mendocino, Two-oard Chairs, Stroke Sander, Spindle Laminations, Finishing on the Lathe, Pin Router, How to Sharpen, Japanese Blades. Kerf-Bent Boxes, Alpine Peasant Furniture, Cowhide for Chairs, Wood-Drying Technolog ies, Sharpening Saws, Furniture Conservation, Shop Math, Mar quetry with Rexible Veneers. 23 The Wood Butcher, Wood Threads, The Scraper, California Woodworking, Bent Laminations, Dry Kiln, Expanding Tables, Stacked Plywood, Serving Cart, Pricing Work. 16 The Shape of a Violin, The Mortise and Tenon Joint, Router Tables, Treadle Lathe, Milk Paint, Flying Woodwork, Routed Signs, Staved Containers, Carved Shells. 7 Building Stairs, Tool Cabinet, Panel-Raising Planes, Carved Signs, Sharpening Equipment, Steambending, Round-Top Table, Routing Morties, New Furniture. In Search of Period Furniture Makers, Harry Nohr's Bowls, Abrasive Planer, Disc Sander, Turning Thin Spindles, Carbide Tipped Circular Saws, Hardwood Plywod, French Fitting. 24 Edward Barnsley, Locking the Joint, Harvesting Green Wood, Shop-Built Vacuum Press, Hollow Turnings, History of Marquetry, Before the Finish, Workbench, Circular Stairway.. Glues and Gluing, Three-Legged Stool, Lute Roes, owl Tuning, Doweling, Spalted Wood, An tiqued Pine Funiture, Solar Kiln, Carving Fans, Bending a Tray. 17 Designing Chairs, End-Grain Lamp, Living Room Table, Cross Country Skis, Shop-Made owl Lathe, Pillar-and-Claw Table, Glu ing Up, Lacquer Finishing. Setting Up a Small Shop, Workbenches, Sawhorses and Vies, Walking-eam Saw, Carving Gouges, Joiner's Tool Case, Com bination Machines, Dial Indicator. Steam Bending, Triangle Mark ing, Painted Furniture Decoration, Chain-Saw Lumbering, Gam ing Tables, Wooden Clamps, Ele gant Fakes, Aztec Drum, Measur ing Moisture. Sawmilling, Bending Com pound Curves, Furniture from Photographs, Routing for Inlays, Die-Making Trade Tips, Finishing Materials, Solid Wood Doors, Library Steps. Designing for Dining, Tall Chests, Entry Doors, Drawer Bot toms, Health Hazards in Wood working, Basic Blacksmithing, Routed Edge Joint, Shaker Round Stand, Small Turned oxes. To order back issues: use the order form op posite. Or you can call toll-free, VISA or MasterCard. 1-426-8171). and charge your order to (Connecticut residents call 1 2 26 11 19 3 27 12 20 13 5 14 22 6 15 31 8 9 1-800-243-7252, FNE WODWORJNG Editor John Kelsey Art Director Deborah Fillion Associate Editor Rick Mastelli Assistant Editor Paul Bertorelli Copy Editor Jim Cummins Art Assistant E. Marino III Editorii Secretary Linda D. Whipkey Senior Editor Ta ge Frid Contbuting Editors R. Bruce Hoadley Richard Starr Simon Wa tts Consulting Editors George Frank Ian). Kirby A. W. Marlow European Editor Roger Holmes Methods 0/ Work Jim Richey i ne Q i n g ' 1982, 32 JANARy/FEBRUARY NUMBER 4 42 14 46 DEPARTMENTS 48 Letters Methods of Wo rk Questions & Answers Books Adventures in Wo odworking Events 54 The Turned Bowl by John Kelsey Connections 61 last Was Best by Richard Starr 62 Timber by George Nakashima The end of infancy for a craft reborn 66 68 What it means to cut a tree 71 Slip Joints on the Radial-Arm Saw by Curtis Erpelding Wooden Bar Clamps by To m Gerson How to make these essential tools 77 Grainger McKoy's Carved Birds by Roger Schroeder On Making Chairs Comfortable by Alan Marks How to it the seat to the sitter 81 Burning-In Bird Feathers by Eldndge Anold 82 Cutting Gauge by John Lively Getting accurate results from a versatile machine 79. 84 Cover: A covey 0/quad explodes into light in this de tad a/a wood sculpture by Grainger McKoy; the whole sculpture is on page 86 87 The right tool for cross-grain layout Above, McKoy mounts one a/the birds on its concealed steel ribbon. He describes this technique and other ways 0/ making wood seem like living eathers in the article begin ning on page 89 77. Photos: Te d Borg. The Business of Woodworking 90 The diary of Artisan Woodworkers by Jo hn Wa rd I get by by Dirk Rosse Stepping back up to amateur status by Robert L. Buyer Strategies for sales and marketing by He nry Inttli 92 How Printer's Saw Rebuilt by Stan We llb on Converting the Hammond Glider 94 Shaker Carrier byJohn Kassay 96 Oval Boxes by To m McFadde n How to make steambent containers 103 Dovetail box, steambend handle THE TAUNTO PRES Paul Roman. publisher;)anice A. Roman. associate pub lISher; JoAnn Muir. director of administration; Karl Ackerman. direct sales coordinator; Lois Beck. business coordinator; Mary Galpin. production coordinator; Jon Miller. assistant to the publisher. Accounting: Irene Ar faras, manager; MadelineColby. Elaine Yamin. Advertis ing Sales: Richard Mulligan, manager; Vivian Dorman and Carole Weckesser, coordinators. Art: Roger Banes. executive an director; Jeanne Criscola, Kathryn Olsen. Boks: Laura Cehanowlz Tringali. editor; Lee Hov. asso ciate:: art director; Deborah Cannarella. editorial assislanr. Fulfillment: Thomas P. Luxeder. manager; Carole E. Ando. subscription manager; JoAnn Canning. Gloria Carson. Dorothy Dreher. Mary Glazman. MarieJohnon. Denise Pascal. Cathy Sakolsky, ancy SdlOCh. Catherine Sulli van. Terry Thomas; Roben Bruschi. mailroom supervior; Marchclle Sperling. David Wass. Marketing:Jack F. Fried man, director; Ellen McGuie. assistant salS manager; Kimberly Mithun, secretary. Production Services: Cynthia Lee Nyitray. manager; Nanc y -Lou Zabriskie Knapp. type setting; Annette Hilly, production assistanr. 108 The Torsion Box by Ian}. Kirby How to make strong, light an-d stable panels Current Work by Rick Mastelli Gallery dealings in Northern California Beyond the Bowl FineWoodworking (ISS 0361-3453) is published bimonthly,January, fhICh. Ma)',July. Septemberand ovembcf. by The Taunton Press, Ic., 'Wlown, r06470. Telephone (203) 426-8171. Second-class postage paid at Newtown. r06470. and additional mail ing officcs.- Cop�'rjght 1982 by The Taunton Press, Inc. No rcprodunion without pcrmission of The Taunton Press, Inc. Fim' 'od working® is a registered trademark of The Taunton Press. Inc. DistribUiors. Inc., III Eighth Ave...New York. N.Y. 10011. Postmaster: Send address changes to The Ta unton Press, Inc. PO Box 355, Newtown, CT 06470 3 26 36 ARILES Subsription rats: Unilro StalS and poss(Ssions. $14 for 00' ycar. $26 fortworears; Canada. $17 far one year, $32 for (wo years (in U.S. dollars, please); Olh'r coumrits, S 18 foront' year, $34 for twO )"ars (in U.S. dollars, please). Single copy, 53.0. Single copies outside u.S. and pssessions. $4.0. Send to Subscription Dept., The Taunton Press, O Box 355, ewtown, T 06470. Address all correspondence to the appropriatl· dcpanml·m (SubsCription, Editorial or Advt·r· tising), The Taunton Prss. 52 Church Hill Road. PO Box 355, Ne.'town, 006470. Uni<:d Stat"s m'wsstand distribUi ion by Ea�t('rn 'ws Letters John Lively's article about Rockwell and Powermatic (F W #30, Sept. '81) was interesting yet frustrating ....Re gardless of all that was said about customer service, quality control, curing of iron castings, despite the company spokesmen bragging about precision, neither firm seems able to make a flat saw-table any longer. I own machines from both companies that I bought new during the last three years. There is not room in a letter to list all the things wrong with them. Suffice it to say that I am not very happy with them. Comparing them to the same basic models sold 15 to 25 years ago to a friend of mine, the diferences are readily apparent. There was more time and care devoted then .. .. It is all very well for Rockwell to say they know that product quality sufered in the 70s, but what about the poor suckers who are stuck with the stuff and expired warranties? The peo ple who relied on both of these companies' reputations and advertising? What good is a warranty or rapid pans replace ment if the new part is as bad or worse than the one returned? And if I printed an owner's manual as full of stupid mistakes as that which Powermatic sent me with their 12-inch planer last year (a $2,600 machine), I would not have the nerve to say anything about operators not knowing how to set up their ma chines correctly .... I for one would be quite willing to pay a bit more for a machine if that would ensure flat tables, straight fences, etc. ... .Y There has been interest in previous issues about the Gilliom bandsaw, so I thought I'd relate my experience with their drill press/ lathe kit. I am an amateur woodworker who does not make his living from his hobby. The Gilliom kit appealed to me as a way to have both a drill press and a lathe at low cost, as well as to have the fun of building my own machine. Now cer tainly these are not tools of industrial or production quality, but I'm happy to improvise jigs and methods that extend and refine my tools. Having used both the drill press and lathe regularly for sev eral months, I am quite pleased with the results. The kit was enjoyable to build and seems sensibly designed. I used heavier lumber than called fo r and added glued joints to the bolt together construction. The castings seem durable enough but not well finished so I had to dress them myself to render the headstock, which also serves as the carrier for the drill spindle, square to the lathe bed. The drill-press table, which travels on a rack-and-pinion mechanism, required some shimming to re duce play and to bring it square to the spindle. I'm not com- -JamesL. Wheele, Houston, ex. Within a week of the time I sent you a letter about my service problems with Rockwell (with a copy to Bill Ramsey of Rock well in Tupelo) I had a telephone call from Ramsey apologiz ing for the dificulties. He said that he had placed a number of GEORGE NAKASHIMA STATEME TOFONERSHIP, MANAGEME T 2. Date of filing: October 1. 1981. 3. Frequency of issue: Bimomhly. 3a. o. of issus published annuaJly: 6. 3b. Annual subscription price: $14.0. 4. carion ANDCIRCULATION (Required by 39 U.S.c. 368�) I. Title: Fine Woodworking. la. Publication no. 105190. f ofice of publicl1ion: 52 Church Hill O Box 355. Ncw(Own, CT 06470. 5. cation of the head quartersof the publishers: 52 Church Hill Road. PO Box 355. New town. CT 06470. 6. Publisher: Paul Roman: �2 Church Hill Road, PO Box 3��, Newtown, CT 06470:Editor:John Kelsey: �2 Church Hill Road, Road, Ic . . 52 Church Hill Road. PO Box 355, ewtown, CT 06470. Stckholders owning or holding 1 percent or more of the total amount f stck: Paul Roman. 52 Church Hill Road, PO Box 355, Newtown, CT 06470;J�lnice A.Roman, 52 Church Hill Road, PO Box 3��, NewtOwn, CT 06470.8. Known bondholders, mort gagees and orher stcurity holders owning or holding 1 percent or more of tOtal amount of bonds, mortgages or other securities: 9. Ot applicable. 10. Extent and nature of circulation: None. A. Tmal no. copies (net press run). B. Paid Circulation Actual no. copies Average no. copies of single issue each Issue dWlng published nearst preceding to filing date 12 months Oct. I. 1981 I. Sales through dealers and carriers. street vendors and counter sales .. 2.Mail subscription .. 216.46 22�.693 D. Free distribution by mil. carrir or )(her m�ns, samples. complimentary, and other free copies. sc, 2�.667 29,637 179,2�3 184,460 204.920 214,97 F. Copies not distributed I. Office G; � f � ��� . 1.437 t.711 206,3�7 2t�,808 INTERNATIONAL oEast53rdSt.. left ver, unaccounted, spoiled after NY KODANSHA ! � G. Total (Sum orE. FI and 2). ' �,6�� �.48� 2. r agents. 4.034 4,400 216.46 22�,69 3 I certify thal the Statements made by me above are correCI and complete. Signature: Paul Roman, Publisher. 11. 4 calls to the main oice, service organization, and distributor to ascertain how the ball had been dropped, and assured me that new wheels for my bandsaw were on the way by UPS direct from his plant. Sure enough, two weeks later I received the two wheels, the fence screw for my jointer, and a new vibration-free belt to try on my bandsaw. They had made sure that the bandsaw wheels were well-balanced-there were 20 balance holes drilled in the one wheel and 21 in the other. And as to the .. bottom line" -my bandsaw now runs very smoothly. -John M. McCabe, Pittsfo rd, O Box 355, ewtown, CT 06470. 7. Owner: The Taunton Prss, C. TOlal p a id circulation .. E. TOlal distribution .. r od ADJUSTA E e. ' T EVEL with brass fit tings, 10" $19.95ostpaid rosewod and brass 8 ' SQUARE $1695ostpaid. FRSET$34.95 & walnut OW . ORORTBECINAWMILSPAYFOR EMSELESINOEDA!! ash •Cutupto50/1Width W' 15/1 SAW with brass hardware,0 blae. $ 59.95 ostpaid replacement blade $ lnc, -Mill the wood where it falls ORRE S� ER� E� simple as operating a chainsaw Tiverton.Rhodelsland 02878 send check or m.o. allow 4·6wks. 15BeechAvenue -easily adjusts rom to thick � TOOL WORKS INC. - wmTETO: WESTCALDWELL.NEWJERSEY 07006. U.S.A .• 201/744-6110 � ES • 80X 12248 Fine Woodworking Books The right information makes all the difference. FineWoodworkingBooks. You'll find volumes of detailed, practical information in our growing library of For a listing (and an order form), take a look at the insert in the front of this issue. For a free catalog, write us at the address below. Or call toll-free, 1-800-243-7252 1-426-8171). n ss (in Connecticut, meh T470 W S2 Church ill Rd., Neton, 5 NOW YOU CN AW IT YORSEF! •NoHeyMong •EayOperaion-s HANCRAFTED Hoover Tool Jorks, call [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ] |
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