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  • Fine Woodworking 036, papermodels, historica

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    SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 1982,
    No.
    36, $3.00
    111
    a
    Lapstrake Boatbuilding

    lqQ
    Q
    Wor kin
    g
    T
    Ee
    IQ
    ES
    e
    shop, tools and joiery, in selecions from
    issus No.20 through 25
    of
    Fine odworking
    magazine
    A
    Yr
    Hardco
    ver.232a
    gs.517.0
    ine
    Wdwrig
    (in one volme)
    -
    Fine Wdworking Techniques 4.
    It's filled with all the technical
    Fine Woodworking
    magazine brings its readers detailed articles by skilled craftsmen­
    the latest and best about techniques, tools and materials. Now another year's worth of these articles is
    available in durable, hardcover form
    Six times a year
    1980
    issues of
    Fine odworking
    (numbers
    20
    through
    25).
    There are
    78
    articles in all,
    covering everything from precision joinery to the fixing of wobbly chairs, from setting up a small shop
    to building a blockfront desk.
    articles from the
    Fine Woodworking Techniques 4
    (or any of the previous three
    Techniques
    books) today. You will find
    an order form in this issue, or you can call us toll-free,
    1-80-243-7252,
    and use your credit card. (In Con­
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    necticut, call
    W
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    Slld
    crafsmen share their
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    If you want your woodworking information in well-organized, permanent form, order your copy of
    FINE WOODWORKING
    Editor
    John Kelsey
    Art Director
    Deborah Fillion
    Associate Editor
    Rick Mastelli
    Arsistant Editors
    Paul Bertorelli
    Jim Cummins
    Copy Editor
    Nancy Stabile
    Art Assistant
    Roland Wolf
    Editoial Assistant
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    Contributing Editors
    Tage Frid
    R. Bruce Hoadley
    Richard Starr
    Simon Watts
    Consulting Editors
    George Frank
    Ian J. Kirby
    A.W. Marlow
    Methods of Work
    Jim Richey
    g
    "
    SEPTEMBER
    /OCTOBER 1982, NUMBER 36
    DEPARTMENTS
    ine
    qi
    14
    Design Book Enty Blank
    42
    Adventures in Woodworking
    16
    Methods of Work
    46
    Events
    26
    Questions & Answers
    50
    Connections
    ARTICLES
    54
    Lapstrake Boatbuilding
    by Simon Wa tts
    The thousand-year-old way to keep aloat
    60
    Chainsaw Lumbermaking
    by Wil Maloff
    Good-bye to vibration and fu mes
    64
    New Machines Turn Logs to Boards
    Stools
    65
    The three-legged stool
    by David W. Scott
    70
    The Taming of the Skew
    by Mike Darlow
    Subtlety, not fo rce, wins fa vor
    A slightly diferent angle
    by Jim Cummins
    76
    Wood Identiication at FPL
    by Paul Bertoreli
    Gilding
    79
    On the trail of Cennino
    by Henry E. Sostman
    Curved Moldings on the Radial-Arm Saw
    80
    Shaper setup can CUt a swan-neck
    by Walace M. Kunkel
    82
    Clock tops and planing
    by Raymond H. Haserodt
    Woodworking Injuries
    84
    A hand surgeon looks at how accidents happen
    by Dr. E. Jeff Justis
    Cover: The sweeping, ovelapped planks of
    this ancient Viking ship are an elegant, un­
    mistakable characteristic
    of
    lapstrake boat­
    building-a technique at
    least
    ten centuries
    old. Lapstrake boats are made with relatively
    thin planks riveted together into strong, light
    huls. Much of what we know about this art
    has been leaned
    fro m
    the okstad ship, shown
    on the cover,
    and
    from the Oseberg ship, whose
    richly carved bow iS
    J
    ictured above. For more
    86
    88
    An island with dogs and drawers
    by Dwayne]. Intved
    Survey of hand injuries
    Workbenches
    90
    91
    A portable carving bench
    by Everett Traylor
    Photographing Your Work
    The set-up table
    by Heny T. Kramer
    54.
    Photos: ©University of National
    92
    Like woodcraft, the more care you take, the better the results
    by Gary Zeff
    on
    Vikin
    g
    boats an lapstrake boatbuilding,
    see p.
    96
    Watching a ptofessional shoot a chair
    by Rick Masteli, Deborah Filion
    Antiquities, Oslo, Norway.
    98
    Linenfold Carving
    by Rick Butz
    Planes and gouges shape fo lds
    Current Work
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    Letters
    As reviewed in
    FWW
    #34, plate joinery is a rapid and accu­
    rate method of aligning boards. Several years ago I began
    using the #20 Lamello plates or splines for various projects.
    As a hobbyist, I couldn't justiy the more than $500 price of
    the Minilo machine, and the less expensive Elu had not come
    out yet. The Minilo machine uses a 100mm (4-in.) diameter
    blade that CUts a slot 4mm (%2 in.) wide and 12.5mm (� in.)
    deep. As an alternative, I purchased a %rin. slotting cutter
    for use in a router. It does the job quite nicely, with the only
    difference being that the slotting cutter is 2 in. in diameter
    instead of 4 in. Therefore the slot, which is Cut by moving the
    blade along, is slightly deeper at the ends of the spline than
    necessary. This has posed no problems for my purpose. With
    tencies with the international rules of botanical nomenclature
    become apparent. Also, there is sometimes room fo r argu­
    ment as to which genus a species properly belongs. For exam­
    ple, the question of whether incense-cedar is
    Calocedrus de­
    currens
    or
    Libocedrus decurrens
    falls into this category.
    However, the use of names that were unequivocally replaced
    decades ago is just plain inexcusable. Mussey's
    "Abies ex­
    celsa"
    was a real puzzler, because that name had been var­
    iously used for no less than three distinCt species during the
    19th century. I finally determined that he was referring to
    what is now known as
    Abies alba,
    usually known in English
    as European silver fir and rarely as "German ir."
    I
    do
    encourage you to continue using botanical names. I'm
    sure they are helpful to your fo reign readers who may not be
    familiar with American common names, and they can be a
    definite help to anyone who works with tropical woods. Per­
    haps you may also save some 21st-century scholar
    /wood­
    worker the frustration that I'm sure Mussey experienced in
    deciphering those old recipes.
    For your reference:
    Ca/itris quadrivalvis
    (misspelled as
    Calitris)
    is
    Tetraclinis articulata, Rhus copal/inum
    is
    Rhus copa/ina,
    and
    Rhus venicifera
    is
    Rhus veniciJlua.
    -Kim C. Steiner, Associate Professor of
    Forest Genetics, Pennsylvania State University
    ROBERT MUSSEY REPLIES:
    I appreciate these corrections. Professor
    Steiner properly points to the confusion in trying to interpret histori­
    cal material. I have discovered another error in the article as pub­
    lished. The sentence at the botrom of the irst column of p.
    57
    parenthetically describes true "English polishes"
    +
    4-in. dia. Minilo blade
    s
    a 0.945-in. diameter bearing, the slot is about � in. deep,
    which matches the cutting depth of the 4-in. blade. A cus­
    tom-ground, carbide-toothed slotting cutter can be purchased
    from Winchester Carbide Saw, 2633 Paper Mill Rd., Win­
    chester, Va. 22601. A 4-wing assembly (includes cutter, ar­
    bor and bearing) COStS less than $35 with postage. Request a
    B-13 bearing with the assembly, and specify whether you
    want a X-in. or �-in. arbor. You can also purchase a less
    expensive 2-wing assembly, or just the cutter by itself if you
    already have an arbor and bearing.
    -David D. Dolton, Bowie, Md.
    "oil varnishes
    made with copal and shellac resins." These are
    spirit
    varnishes
    made with copal and shellac resins; shellac is not soluble in oil.
    I have also come across another source of supply for varnishes
    and varnish resins. It is Wood Finishing Enterprises, Box
    10117,
    Milwaukee, Wis.
    53210.
    Ms. Holzapfel's reflections on handicapped persons gammg
    access to wood turning through the use of a machine lathe
    (FWW
    #34, p. 98) are indeed faCt. At the Veterans Admin­
    istration's Blind Rehabilitation Clinic in Northampton,
    Mass., we have been using a machine lathe as well as a com­
    pound rest attachment on our wood lathe as an integral part
    of the training of blind and visually impaired veterans for
    over ten years. We use these more mechanical methods as a
    confidence-building introduction to turning, or to make pre­
    cise turned pieces. Except in cases of severe physical impair­
    ment, we also encourage our clients to attempt freehand turn­
    ing as an exercise in coordination, creativiry and "feel."
    A device that has been
    very effective in allowing visually
    or
    physically impaired persons to do freehand turning is a tool
    rest made from a X-in. thick steel plate mounted flat on the
    tool-rest post. You set its height to ix the plane of cut for a
    scraping tool, and it provides support along the length of the
    tool. This lessens the chance of accidentally raising or lowering
    the point of Cut and gouging the project. We make the plate
    triangular in plan, to fit into bowls.
    Using these devices in conjunction with most other normal
    procedures, we have been able to introduce over 200 handi­
    capped individuals to a more independent lifestyle through
    woodworking.
    -Peter A. Kukish, Evan G. Bandouveres,
    V.A. Medical Center, Northampton, Mass.
    I must call your attention to serious safery problems depiCted
    in John Kolkman's Method for sharpening planer knives
    (FWW
    #34, p. 14). The irst error is grinding on the side of
    a type
    1 grinding wheel. Type 1 wheels are
    made to be used
    on the periphery only; they are not made to be stressed from
    the side. In addition, any wearing of the side only further
    weakens the wheel. Wheels designed for side grinding are
    steel-backed, with the abrasive cemented to the back.
    The drawing also shows a wheel lange on one side but
    none on the other. This is also very dangerous. The pressure
    of the flanges must come at opposite points on the side of the
    grinding wheel. The combination of a larger flange and a
    smaller nut will create a SOrt of punch press that can cause the
    wheel to explode.
    -Oliver Quist, Stoddard, N.H.
    In Kolkman's application, may I suggest a type 6 straight cup
    wheel or a type 11 laring cup wheel? Not only does the user
    reduce the risk of injury, but these are standard "tool room"
    wheels that most industrial suppliers will have on the shelf in
    a wide range of grades.
    -Tim Neun, Portland, Ore.
    Robert Mussey's article "Early Varnishes"
    (FWW
    #35, July
    '82) was very interesting and obviously thoroughly re­
    searched. Unfortunately, I must fault him in a small way for
    the careless use of botanical names. Of the seven in the arti­
    cle, there are three misspellings and twO instances of entirely
    incorrect names. This is not surprising: supposedly ..correCt"
    botanical names are replaced from time to time as inconsis-
    Many of us do a lot of turning, and have found that, to our
    horror, checks and defects mar the inished product. Instead
    of trying to hide these defects, I have made them work for me
    by making them more pronounced. The defeCts are filled
    with a mixture of fine sawdust or water putty, carpenters'
    glue, and acrylic color (the brighter the better). Mix to a thick
    4
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    Mitchell 8
    Frank Mittermeier
    2
    5
    Morris Wood Tol 12
    Narive American Hardwoods 45
    Nobex
    26
    Northwest Lumber 45
    Olson Saw 40
    CR. Onsrud 46
    Parks Woodworking Machine 37
    Paxton Hardware
    NAME
    Qty. Pri
    I
    /
    The japan
    Woodworker
    Woodmasrer Power Tols
    Woodshop Specialties
    Woodworker's Supply
    X-Acto
    Xylophiles Co.
    Yukon Lumber
    Russ Zimmerman
    ADDRESS
    STATE
    ZP
    Fine Tol Shops
    20, 25
    18
    28, 47
    20
    43
    13
    17
    36
    25
    o
    Check
    0
    M.a.
    0
    Visa
    0
    MC
    0
    Ane,
    Card
    No.
    Fine Woods Ltd.
    20
    -
    OFFER EXPIRES OCTOBER 31, 982.
    _
    Fisher Hill Produas
    28
    Expires
    Foley-Belsaw Co.
    33
    Foredom Electric
    40
    Forrest Mfg. Co.
    1
    10
    L
    -
    ---
    -
    -
    --
    ---
    5
    J
    Fox Maple Tools
    28
    Pootatuck
    20
    Freud
    29
    Porter-Cable
    I 5
    --
    apply.
    these
    compounds will
    l'nh�lnce the value of your fine wood.
    .
    ••
    '
    Maurice
    Kuemel Chime
    E.
    ell!'
    Payment by:
    [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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