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  • Fine Woodworking 041, papermodels, historica

    [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
    Fine
    JULy/AUGUST
    1983, No.41, $3.50
    ood
    i
    ll 1
    Giant Turnings

    POWERMATIC

    ROCKWELL . HEG
    NER . INCA .
    PORTER-CABLE . HITACHI
    . BLACK&
    DECKER
    .

    >

    l
    j
    BRATTON MACHINERY SAVES YOU MONEY
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    ROCKWELL
    (FOB Tallahassee, FL)
    15-091 Drill Press
    Floor type with
    h
    h.p., 1 ph.
    motor, p.b. switch.
    With mortising
    attachment and
    set of
    .
    and

    Greenlee
    Mortising Chisels
    and Bits
    $5
    60. Value
    SALE
    ....
    .
    .
    $459.
    10" Contractor Saw
    Includes stand and
    two extension wings.
    25" rip capacity right,
    15h left, self-aligning
    Micro-Set Jet-Lock
    rip fence. Cast iron
    table. Heavy duty
    stamped steel wings
    1
    'h
    115/230 motor
    toggle switch.
    List .
    ..
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    ..
    .
    925.
    Sa
    14" Band Saw
    with enclosed steel
    stand, beltguard,
    Y.
    hp single phase
    motor
    &
    push button
    switch mounted and
    wired in stand
    List .
    .
    .
    ..
    ...
    .
    ..
    . 00.
    Sa
    ..
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    . 599.
    .
    ..
    ..
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    699.
    POWERMATIC
    (FOB McMinnville, TN)
    Model 100
    12" Planer
    3 h.p., 1 ph. motor,
    230 volt,
    weight 410 Ibs.
    List
    ..
    .
    .
    .
    .
    $2,436.
    SALE
    .
    ..
    .
    $2,235.
    Model 26
    -
    Shaper
    h and . inter­
    chang able spindles,
    3 hp single phase
    230 volt m
    otor,
    magnetic controls
    List
    ...
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    ..
    1833.
    SALE
    Model
    0
    8" Jointer, with Stand
    1h single phase
    115 volt motor,
    toggle switch.
    List
    .
    .
    ....
    .
    .
    .
    .
    . 1,451
    SALE
    HITACHI
    ...
    .
    .
    ...
    .
    1,699.
    ...
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    . 1,325.
    PORTER CABLE
    (Prices include freight)
    P100F - Planer
    List
    ....
    .
    .
    ..
    ...
    .
    .
    $1,530.
    SALE
    MAKITA
    .
    .
    .
    .
    ...
    .
    .
    .
    .
    $1,120.
    Router TR 12
    List
    .
    ..
    ..
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    ..
    $299.
    SALE
    Model 360-
    Belt Sander (Dustless)
    3 x 24
    List
    .....
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    $269.
    SALE
    ...
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    $209.
    .
    ....
    .
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    .
    $16
    Router TR 8
    List
    ..
    .....
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    $196.
    SALE
    .
    .
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    ..
    .
    ..
    . $124.
    Sander SB75 3 x 21
    List
    ....
    ....
    .....
    .
    .
    $195.
    SALE
    ::
    0


    F1000A Planer-Jointer
    List
    .
    ..
    .
    ...
    .
    ..
    .
    ..
    $1,999.
    SALE
    .
    ..
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    .
    .
    .
    $1,460.
    Stationary Machines FOB Atlanta Portables Postage Paid
    Mdel
    0
    S
    ed
    -Blc
    Finishing Sander
    4x4h 1.2 amp
    List
    .
    .
    .
    ....
    ...
    .
    5.0
    Sale
    ::

    ...
    Z
    o
    .
    ....
    ..
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    .
    $128.
    10" Miter Box
    2401 b.w., post positive
    stops at 90° and 45°
    blade included
    (bag extra)
    List
    ...
    ...
    .....
    .
    ...
    $316.
    SALE
    .
    .
    .
    ...
    .
    .
    .
    .
    ...
    $216.
    (Freight Included)
    .....
    .
    .
    .
    ..
    62.95

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    Model 505 -
    Finishing Sander 4h x 4 ..
    List
    ...
    .
    .
    ..
    ..
    ...
    ..
    .
    ..
    145.
    SALE .
    .
    ..
    ..
    .
    ...
    .
    .
    ..
    $104.

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    o
    ...
    )

    '
    n
    l
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    Z
    o
    INCA
    Model 710
    JORGENSEN CLAMPS
    (Freight prepaid)
    List
    t
    P
    ipe Clamp." pipe #
    0
    $11.23
    Z
    QTY.
    PRICE
    20" Band Saw
    1
    'h
    h.p. motor
    Stand Extra
    List
    ..
    . $1,413
    SALE
    .
    P
    "
    ."
    ...
    -
    Hand Screw #
    1 10" x 6" $18.25
    SALE
    $ 7.90
    $ 7.25
    $11.75

    0
    6 for $71.50


    o
    z
    o
    z
    6 for
    $39.50

    .
    $1,399
    (del. freight prepd.)
    Don't miss our promotion on Rockwell's
    UNISAW advertised In this same Issue.
    >
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    &
    SUPPLY,
    INC.
    ATTN:
    Dept.
    FWW
    1015 Commercial Street
    P.O.
    Box
    4
    8
    Tallahasse, FL 32316
    Call toll

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    BRATON MACHINERY
    HEGNER
    (Prices include freight)
    Multimax 2
    SALE $829.
    Woodturning Lathe
    SALE $1,745.
    Duplicating Attachment
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    In Florida: (94) 222-4842
    Write for catalogs.
    Enclose $3 for postage & handling.
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    SALE $995.
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    l
    POWERMATIC

    ROCKWELL
    .
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    NER
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    INCA
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    PORTER-CABLE
    .
    HITACHI

    BLACK
    &
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    ROUTER BITS
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    SAW BLADES NOW IN STOCK!
    $40.00 minimum order for cash or charge.

    2
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    Steel Bar C
    lamp #3724 $10.54
    12 for $85.50

    FINE WOODWORKING
    Editor
    John Kelsey
    Art Director
    Deborah Fillion
    Associate Editors
    Rick Mastelli
    Paul Bertorelli
    Assistant Editor
    Jim Cummins
    Copy Editor
    Nancy Stabile
    Art Assistant
    Roland Wolf
    Editorial Assistant
    Linda D. Whipkey
    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
    i
    ne
    i
    n
    g
    '
    J
    ULY
    /AUGUST 1983, NUMBER 41
    DEPARTMENTS
    20
    Letters
    Methods of Wo rk
    Questions & Answers
    Notebook: Bark Beetles
    Books
    Profile: Cornwall Carver
    88
    News and Notes
    Exhibition: At the Wustum
    Events
    Connections
    Adventure: Pick-Up Sticks
    80
    98
    82
    102
    86
    ARTICLES
    28
    A Wooden Tablesaw
    by Galen Winchip
    An attractive, shopmade alternative to cast iron
    33
    Testing the wooden saw
    by Paul Bertorelli
    34
    The Laminated Wood Ribbon
    by James Rannefe ld
    A built-up joint with sculptural possibilities
    36
    Respiratory Hazards
    by George Mustoe
    Choosing the right protection
    40
    Making Ax Handles
    by Delbert reear
    A good handle fits at both ends
    42
    Kitchen on a Stick
    by Jere Cary
    A pencil and a few lx2s tell the whole story
    46
    The Legendary Norris Plane
    by Edward C. Smith
    A hard-to-find tool that's worth the search
    48
    Turning Giant
    Bowls
    by Dale Nish
    .
    Ed Moulthrop's tools and techniques
    54
    Making a Pencil-Post Bed
    by Herbert W. Akers
    A method for shaping tapered oCtagonal posts
    Cover: Ed Moulthrop tuns a tuip magnolia
    log into a bowl
    30
    in. in diameter. To under­
    stand Moulthrop's special tools and tech­
    niques, woodtuming expert Dale Nish visited
    him at his Atlanta shop.
    Be
    g
    inning
    on p. 48,
    Nish tels what he
    leaned.
    Cover photo by
    Louie Favorite,
    Atlanta Journal.
    56
    Layout tips from the boatyard
    by Michael Podmaniczky
    60
    The Woodcraft Scene:
    San Francisco in Miniature
    by Michael Pearce
    65
    Making Your Own Hardware
    by David Sloan
    Hand-worked brass beats the store-bought stuff
    68
    Wooden Eyeglass Frames
    by Howard Bruner
    Making a spectacle of yourself
    THE TAUNTON PRESS
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    70
    Color and Wood
    by Roger Holmes
    Dyeing for a change
    74
    Small New England Clocks
    by Jim Cummins
    Minimal cases hide elegant works
    104
    Alice's Wonderland
    gali, editOr;
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    57
    Moldings
    by Victor J. Taylor
    Applying geometry with sryle
    62
    Keeping the "Poplars" Straight
    by Jon W. Amo
    Many woods, good for many different things
    66
    A catch, three hinges and a lock
    Fine Woodworking
    (ISSN
    Newtown,
    T
    or Advertising), The Taunton Press,
    Letters
    I am glad to see that the stain-versus-gloss controversy, which
    had raged in earlier issues, has been revived by Don Newell's
    well-taken comments regarding the appropriateness of each
    (F
    W
    #37, p. 102). Charles Dickens, that master of the
    spirit of descriptive prose, expressed his own mid-nineteenth­
    century opinion on the subject in chapter three of
    Mar­
    tin Chuzzlewitt:
    It was none of your fr ivolous and preposterously bright bed­
    rooms, where nobody can close an eye with any kind of pro­
    priety or decem regard to the association of ideas; but it was a
    good, dull, leaden, drowsy place, where evey icle of
    i
    ture
    reminded you that you
    n
    e there
    o
    sleep, and that you were
    expected to sleep. There was no wakeful reflection of the fire
    there, as in your modern chambers, which upon the darkest
    nights have a watchful consciousness of French polish; the old
    Spanish mahogany winked at it now and then, as a dozing
    cat or dog might, nothing more. The vety size and shape, and
    hopeless immovability of the bedstead, and wardrobe, and in
    a minor degree of even the chairs and tables, provoked sleep;
    they were plainly apoplectic and disposed to snore.
    -Wesley Kobylak, Tuscarora, N.
    .
    cause the codes are written for large industrial motors.
    In 40 years in the chemical industry, I never saw a blower
    or fan with non-sparking blades, except fo r plastic blades
    used to avoid corrosion. The fan switch can spark unless it's a
    mercury switch. The garden-variery mercury switch won't
    meet industrial explosion-proof standards, but it can't spark
    in normal operation.
    -David Canel, Wilmington, N.C.
    Stan Wellborn's letter in
    FWW
    #39 about the woodturner
    wearing a necktie brought to mind a recent experience I had.
    I've adapted a Sony Walkman to fit inside my hearing pro­
    tectors ...a super way to make hours spent at droning ma­
    chines more enjoyable. But watch Out fo r those loose ear­
    phone wires. While whistling along at the flap sander, I
    brushed a little toO close and before I knew it the Walkman
    was thrown to the floor and the wires were torn from the
    headphones. Whew !
    There's good reason why OSHA demands that all drive
    shafts and belts be enclosed. Even if you think you're too
    clever, it's easy to slip up just once (or twice).
    -Nick Nicholson, Welfleet, Mass.
    Craig Brown's comment in
    F
    W
    #40 (p. 10) on the use of
    fans to ventilate fumes from a workshop is 100% wrong. The
    motors of bathroom and kitchen ventilating fans are shaded
    pole motors and have no spark-producing mechanisms. Split
    phase, capacitor-start and repulsion-induction motors all have
    starting windings which are disconnected by a spark-produc­
    ing switch when the motor gets up to speed. These motors
    must be modified to be explosion-proof. Small pumps and
    fans ...are not included in the codes as explosion-proof be-
    -
    .
    v
    #
    13�
    In Rick Mastelli's article in
    FWW
    #39 (p. 78), he quotes
    John Economaki as claiming that Sam Maloof said "industri­
    al arts teachers didn't know anything."
    After teaching industrial education for 26 years to some
    3,000 students, I really resent being told that I know noth­
    ing. I realize I've never created a large, one-of-a-kind table or
    special chairs, but in talking to past students, I have a sense
    that they have learned to love the fe el, beauty, strength and
    fu nCtions of wood. Many are working in wood-related indus­
    tries, carpentry, or avocationally in their own workshops.
    I believe that Economaki, or Maloof, has done industrial
    education a great disservice and should apologize for this
    statement. The shaping of young lives is as important as the
    shaping of wood and JUSt as rewarding. I will continue to
    think of Maloof as one of the world 's greatest craftsmen, but
    with reservations.
    -Paul J. Hooker, Zeeland, Mich.
    RICK MASTELLI REPLIES:
    We received a number of such letters fr om
    offended I-A teachers, and all deserve an apology. The point was to
    emphasize the transition in Economaki's own career, not to insult
    anyone. Maloof has said that many industrial arcs teachers are doing
    archaic things. He has also said that many are doing outstanding
    work. In recalling his self-image at the time-a time when he was
    himself an industrial arts teacher-Economaki meant to communi­
    cate how radically Maloof had affected him. The sentence unfortu­
    nately pulled on the wrong lever to move a large idea.
    iM
    D CUT
    oVnAI5
    A.TERV.
    MDl
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    �� �
    I enjoyed Kevin Kelly's article on making bee boxes
    (FWW
    #39, pp. 86-89) and thought your readers might be
    interested in an experience of mine. While working for a
    CARE-sponsored beekeeping extension and research project in
    Belize, it was my dury to procure equipment and bees for the
    Mayan Indians I was training to become beekeepers. White
    pine boxes imported fr om the U.S. would either rot in two
    years or be devoured immediately by the local termites, who
    fo und the imported wood particularly appetizing.
    The answer was simple. In northern Belize, the Mennonites
    had for years been turning out household fu rniture in their
    woodworking shops using abundant, cheap mahogany. On
    contract with local beekeeping cooperatives, they were soon
    producing a fu ll line of well-built bee equipment inexpensive­
    ly made from solid mahogany.
    Before returning to the U.S., I asked a local woodworker
    to build a shipping trunk for me. I gave him the rough di­
    mensions and asked that it be made fr om clear mahogany
    that I could reuse after I returned home. He seleCted some


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    Finest selection of English and
    American Woodturning tools;
    your headquarters for Sorby,
    Buck Bros. and Turnmaster. A
    complete line of abrasive tools,
    chucks, finishes and accessories
    such as clocks, peppermills,
    coffeemills and circular tiles.
    Many more items-All at very
    competitive prices-
    SEND
    S2.0
    FOR OUR NEW
    EXPANDED 44 PAGE CATALOG WITH
    COLOR.
    S2.0
    REFUNDED WITH ORDER.
    CRAn SUPPLIES
    U
    _________
    ___
    ________
    ___
    NAME
    ________
    ___
    ADDRESS
    CITY
    STATE
    1
    o
    n &U
    n
    "Fine Clockmakers Since 1947"
    Dept. 2132, W. Yarmouth, Cape Cd,
    MA 02673
    ZIP
    42. 54
    inches
    between centers
    1644
    S. State SI. Provo.
    UT 84601
    A
    Tel. (801) 373·0917
    5
    1437
    S.
    od
    ward Ave
    ..
    Birmingham. Michigan
    401 1 (313)
    44-440
    Drill.
    No matter what your clock­
    building needs, come to
    Mason


    &
    Sons
    Ltd.


    Heavy duty spindle and bearings
    Universal adjustment tool rest
    GRADUATE LATHE
    Available in
    30.
    specialists in woodturning tools
    S
    [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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