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  • Fine Woodworking 035, papermodels, historica

    [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
    JULy/AUGUST
    1982, No.
    35, $3.00
    oring
    o
    New rom the publishes of Fine Wdworng
    Chainsaw
    Lumbermaking
    Ever had trouble finding the right
    lumber at the right price? Ever want­
    ed to build something with wood
    from your own trees? In his new
    book, Will Mallof shows you how to
    turn your chainsaw into a lumber­
    mill-simply, safely and economicall.
    You'll find out how to modify and
    maintain your chainsaw and mill, how
    to grind a smooth-cutting ripping
    chain, how to select and fell the right
    tree, and how to saw it into a fine pile
    of lumber. There's even a section de­
    voted to specialty work, including the
    milling of burls and big wood.
    Hardcover,
    224
    pages,
    $23.0
    Fine Woodworking
    Techniques
    4
    It took
    Fine Woodworking
    magazine six issues to cover
    the information now available in
    Fine Woodworking
    Techniques 4.
    This latest addition to the series of
    Tech­
    niques
    books includes articles from issues
    20
    through
    25-
    everything from the repairing of wobbly chairs to the
    building of carousel horses, from sawhorse construction
    to precision joinery. There are
    78
    articles in all, written by
    74
    experienced craftsmen.
    ""'""""'"RO.B,,'>.;.N,,,'OW".COM"
    Hardcover,
    232
    pages,
    $17.0
    me
    nn
    ss
    To Order:
    Use the insert in this issue. Or call
    our toll-free number
    (1-800-243-7252)
    and
    use your credit card. (In Conn., call1-42-SI71.)
    FINE WOODWORKING
    Editor
    John Kelsey
    Art Director
    Deborah Fillion
    Associate Editor
    Rick Mastelli
    Assistant Editors
    Paul Bertorelli
    Jim Cummins
    Roger Holmes
    Copy Editor
    Nancy Stabile
    Editorial Assistant
    Linda D. Whipkey
    Contributing Editors
    Tage Frid
    R. Bruce Hoadley
    Richard Starr
    Simon Watts
    Consulting Editors
    George Frank
    JULY/AUGUST 1982, NUMBER 35
    In
    DEPARTMENTS
    4
    12
    14
    24
    &
    32 Books
    34 Design Book
    re
    J. Kirby
    A.W. Marlow
    Methods of Work
    Jim Richey
    36 Adventures in Woodworking
    38 Events
    Answers
    ARTICLES
    46 Joinery Along Curved Lines by Jim Sweeney
    A general method for template routing
    50
    Relying on the Router
    Three tricks: drawer pull, mortising jig and wooden hinge
    54
    Early Varnishes
    by Robert D. Mussey
    The 18th century's search for the perfect ilm inish
    58 The Harpers Ferry Conservation Shop
    by Paul Bertoreli
    Where White House furnirure gets refurbished
    61 Framing Pictures by Jim Cummins
    Choosing and making suitable moldings
    68 Three Decorative Joints by Tage Frid
    Emphasize the outlines with contrasting veneers and splines
    Most of the
    picture-frame
    moldings above, as
    wel as the one on
    t
    h
    e
    cover, were made on the
    tablesaw using nothing more complicated
    than a lO-in. carbide blade and a shopmade,
    adjustable-angle fence. For more about the
    framer's craft , including such fi ne points as
    how to choose a frame, how to make the mold­
    ing, and how to cut it and join it, see p.
    61.
    71 Bermudan Dovetailing by Ja mes Bump
    72 Building a Stripper Canoe by Buce Winterbon
    Cedar and iberglass make a strong, lightweight shell
    76
    Another Approach to the Stripper by Richard Swanson
    78 Getting the Right Feel by Charles Parish
    Don McClain's formula for good furniture and good business
    80 Dough Trays by Delbert reear
    The Southern tradition of handmade wooden bowls
    84 Using Bench Planes
    by Ian J. Kirby
    These basic tools still do what machines can't
    Current Work
    88
    Fresh approaches to marketing
    by Paul Bertorelli
    8
    9
    Alabama wood show
    by Craig Butt
    eworth
    91
    Showing urniture across the continent
    by eorge Breck and Roger Bell
    92 A Time and Motion Study
    THE TAUNTON PRESS
    Paul Roman, publisher; Janice A. Roman, assciate pub­
    lisher; JoAnn Muir, direcror of adminiStration; Tom Lux­
    edet, business manager; Jon Miller, promotion manager;
    Lois Beck,
    purchasin
    g
    cordinaror; Mary Galpin, production
    coordinarot; Claire
    nn
    M.
    Fine Woodworking
    by
    T
    T
    by
    sss
    Starr
    Wells,
    director; RIchard Mulligan,
    sales manager; Vivin Dorman and Carole Weckeser, cor­
    dinarors.
    Roger Barnes, executive art director; Jeanne
    Criscola, Kathryn Olsen. Books: Laura Cehanowicz Tringali,
    ediror;
    T
    ll
    i
    O
    Hov, associate art ditecror; Debotah Cannarella,
    edirorial assistant.
    Fulfillment:
    Carole E. Ando, subscription
    manager; Terry Thomas, assiscanr manager; Rita Amen,
    JoAnn Canning, Glotia Carson, Dorothy Dteher, Marie
    Johnson, Denise Pascal,
    Cath
    y
    Sakolsk
    y
    ,
    Nancy Schch,
    Catherine
    Sullivan, loAnn Traficanti; Robert
    Bruschi, mail­
    room supervisor;
    Marchelle
    Sperling, David Wass.
    Market­
    ing: Ellen McGuire, sales manager; Kimerly Mithun, secre­
    tary; Kathy Springer.
    Production Services:
    Gary Mancini,
    manager; Cynthia
    ee
    (ISSN
    0361-3453)
    is published bimonthly,
    lanuary,
    March, May,
    I
    ly,
    eptemer
    0647).
    Telephone
    (203)
    426-8171.
    cond­
    O
    T
    and Novemer,
    The Taunron Prss, Inc., Newrown,
    06470,
    and additional mailing offics.
    Copyright
    1982
    he
    Taunron Press, Inc. No reproduction without ermission of The Taunton Prss, Inc.
    Fine Wdworking®
    is a registered trademark of The Taunton Press, Inc. Subcription rates: United States and
    ions,
    $14
    fot one yeat,
    $26
    for
    wO
    years; Canada,
    $17
    for one year,
    $32
    for
    wO
    years (in U.S. dollars, pleae); other
    counrries,
    $18
    fot one year,
    $34
    for
    wO
    years (in U.S. dollars, pleae).
    Single
    copy,
    $3.00.
    Sinwe
    copis
    ourside U.S. and sss
    06470.
    Addrss
    ions,
    $4.00.
    end to Subscription De't., The
    Taunron
    Prss,
    corrsondence ro the
    appropnate
    dpartment
    (
    Su
    ox
    355,
    or Advertising), The Taunton Press,
    52
    Church Hill
    Road,
    Box
    355,
    Newtown,
    ptio
    7
    Editoril,
    0>470.
    U.S.
    newsstand distribution by Easten News Distributors, Inc.,
    111
    Eighth Ave., New York, N.Y.
    10011.
    Postmaster: Send address changes to The Taunton Press, Inc., PO Box 355, Newtown,
    T
    06470
    3
    Letters
    Editor's Notebook
    Methods of Work
    Questions
    Cover photo: D. Filion.
    t:
    ee
    Gamble, personnel assistant; Mary
    Glazman, data prcessing; Barbara Bahr, secretary. Account­
    ing:
    Irene Arfaras,
    mana
    g
    er;
    Madeline Colby, Elaine Yamin.
    Advertising:
    class osrage
    paid
    at Newtown,
    Newtown,
    Nyirray, consultant; Annerre Hilry,
    Deborah Mason; Nancy-Lou Knapp, rypesetter.
    Letters
    I
    ---�-- -
    -
    heels from a scant a in. to more than 2 in. high to accommo­
    date different thicknesses of wood. I prefer to use birch ply­
    wood to make the shoe ...and often laminate several pieces
    when I feel a wider push is needed. The extra expense of
    birch is well worth it when safety is a factor.
    The main advantage of the shoe is the extra stability given
    by its sole. This is most helpful when ripping wood that has
    knOts, is very hard or is cupped. The sole also helps hold
    short pieces.
    ...I couldn't agree with Kirby more about the hazards of
    kickback on a tablesaw. By far, the worst injuries I've seen
    associated with the tablesaw have come from kickback. A
    note I'd like to add is to mount a push-button on-off switch
    flush with the edge of the table and at knee height, facing the
    operator. For a right-handed operator, the switch should be
    on the left-hand side of the blade. This can help avoid stand­
    ing in front of the saw with a dangerous situation that needs
    two hands to keep from being potentially fatal, and waiting
    for the motor to overheat so the saw will shut off.
    -Gay Root, E. Calais, Vt.
    ways keep several shoes with
    -.- --

    The reason for this letter is NASA's "space age saw-guard"
    (Methods, March '82). That design is as old
    s
    the Industrial
    Revolution. If that is space age, then the space shuttle's fuse­
    lage was hollowed out with a gutter adze.
    There are many small lumberyards which I've been in that
    employ that type of saw guard. Some are still maintaining
    lineshafts and flatbelts. One lumberyard very near us has a
    16-in. tablesaw with that apparatus mounted to the ceiling so
    it doesn't interfere with large cuts or fence movements.
    -Ric Puis, Elkhart Lake, Wis.
    -John Roccanova, Bronx, N. Y.
    Kirby's article on the tablesaw was informative, yet I don't
    believe it went far enough on safety equipment. What safety
    devices are available and how do they compare? Where are
    they sold? For example, I use a Rockwell 12-in. contractor's
    tablesaw. The original blade guard and anti-kickback device
    are almost unusable. The blade is all but invisible with the
    blade guard in place. What else could be used with that saw?
    The fact that one sees most saws stripped of their safety gear
    indicates that many other people have the same problem that
    I do.
    (F
    W
    #34). He wonders if some advertisers actually make
    more money from selling their advertising literature than
    from selling their product.
    I cannot answer for other advertisers but here are some
    facts regarding our catalog, which we "sell" for $1.50. Cata­
    log costs 45", envelope 4", label 3', order form 2., price list
    2., irst-class postage 88., labor (typing, packing, etc.) 30·.
    The total is $1.74 for something we sell for $1.50. From this
    -William Loehr, Franktown, Colo.
    Craig Arbau
    $h of Noistown,
    Pa., built thtl chey desk for "a
    gent of large outdoor stature with
    the sentimental desire to have
    funiture from his own trees."
    jeff Stewart brought his walnut
    beaver from Mt. Hood to the
    sculpture show held in Februay
    at the Westen Foresty Center
    in Portland, Ore.
    "A marquet
    y
    picture of a bookshef intrigued me, and
    inspired the door of this cabinet...a new realm for me."
    -Silas Kopf, Northampton, Mass.
    4
    I found Ian Kirby's article "Using the Tablesaw" (F
    W
    #34, May '82) a fine refresher on the basics of using this
    machine. The push stick that you depicted is the one shown
    by most industrial arts books; however,
    feel it is not the
    safest or most accurate to use. I have been taught to make a
    push stick in the shape of a shoe. For general work I make
    the shoe about 12 in. long
    and 6 in. high. The heel
    must be a little shorter than
    the thickness of the wood
    being ripped. Therefore I al­
    �.-� -
    1
    would like to answer reader F. Eldon Heighway's letter
    WOODWORKINGMACHINERY
    spening
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    he edge to
    ll
    your
    cuting ools.
    A
    These dependable machines
    feature rugged cast iron and steel
    construction. Massive castings are fully
    ribbed to prevent distortion with all
    working surfaces being fully machined.
    Designed with trunnions and gibbed
    dove-tailed ways that are adjustable to
    compensate for any wear, these are the
    machines that will provide you with a
    lifetime of accuracy, safety and durability.
    Whether you are a professional or serious
    amateur craftsman, General Woodworking
    Machines will deliver the kind of per-
    formance
    can be proud of.
    Garrett Wade has Japan­
    ese water sharpening stones
    that give a mirror-inish edge
    to any
    kind of cutting blade.
    They are fast cutting stones
    Garrett Wade Co.,Dept. 78
    16 1 6th Avenue, N.Y, N.. 10013
    Send the tools indicated and a
    free Introductory Catalog. (If the
    order lotalsS15. 00or more, you will
    receive a free copy of 212-page olain Catalog.)
    that use water, not oil, and make an
    often tiresome job easier. They come
    in three grades-Coarse, Finishing,
    and Fine Finishing-that will let you
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    o
    Coarse @ S9.1O
    p
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    o
    Magnetic angle
    indicator?S. 50p.p.d.
    o
    Send your 212-page catalog of woodworking tools,
    machinery and accessories. Enclosed isS3.
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    Check/Money Order enclosed.
    Garrett Wade also offers a mag­
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    you want when you're honing.
    o
    Visa/Masler Charge/American Express.
    Card No.
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    Fine cutting tools are only as good
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    Japanese sharpening stones.
    Name
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    [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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