Well, I finally worked on the box again. I didn't realize how long it has been. The holdup was needing to get some more Black Walnut. My wife had a scroll saw project that she wanted to use Black Walnut so we went and got some.
So yesterday I glued up the sandwich for the lid and today I got it made. All that is left is finishing.
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John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
How long did it take to learn? I've had mine a couple of years and have not yet used it except to play around with it! This weeken for sure. Just used a gift certificate at my local hardwood store. Got some nice Honduran Mahagony, some cherry and some dloodwood. Three boards, $153.00!
Chris Neilan
Shopsmith Mark 7, Shopsmith Mark V 1982, shortened, Shopsmith 10 ER; Craftsman table saw (1964); Powermatic 3520B lathe
What a gorgeous box John. Nice work. I may have to spring for one of those jigs. Although I kind of like doing it like I have been doing it.
Beautiful!
Dick 1965 Mark VII S/N 407684
1951 10 ER S/N ER 44570 -- Reborn 9/16/14
1950 10 ER S/N ER 33479 Reborn July 2016
1950 10 ER S/N ER 39671
1951 jigsaw X 2
1951 !0 ER #3 in rebuild
500, Jointer, Bsaw, Bsander, Planer
2014 Mark 7 W/Lift assist - 14 4" Jointer - DC3300
And a plethora of small stuff .....
"The trouble with quotes on the Internet is that you can never know if they are genuine." - Benjamin Franklin
ChrisNeilan wrote:How long did it take to learn? I've had mine a couple of years and have not yet used it except to play around with it! This weeken for sure. Just used a gift certificate at my local hardwood store. Got some nice Honduran Mahagony, some cherry and some dloodwood. Three boards, $153.00!
I just bought 9 BF of 4/4 walnut (10' X 11") and 12 BF of 4/4 Maple (12' X 12"). $170.90. The Walnut was $10.73/BF and the Maple was $5.25/BF.
As far as learning it was pretty simple. I watched the video a few times and then had the printed instructions in front of me when I first played with it. If you remember Charlses challenge from my other thread about an 18" long joint with 1/4" pins, that was the third time I tried it. The box in this thread was the next time.
I also bought the package with the Forrest box joint blades. There is nothing better. Equal, maybe but nothing better than Forrest IMO.
John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
More then very nice John!! Nice contrasting wood and clean, crisp lines and joints. What is an I box, or is that the name of a jig for cutting the box joints? Rockler has one for the router, I am not sure if it can be used on a TS with the miter gauge, inconjuction with a dado blade.
CN, my wood store is charging $7.00 for 4/4 BW, and anything over 10" wide, gets a 10 or 20% Wide Board up charge.
KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE EQUALS WISDOM. Albert Einstein
The Greatness officially starts
Greenie, Grayling, SS stand alone BS and BS SPT, jointer and belt sander, 3 Ers with Speed Changers. I think those 3 cover my ER needs, and space for them.
rjent wrote:What a gorgeous box John. Nice work. I may have to spring for one of those jigs. Although I kind of like doing it like I have been doing it.
Beautiful!
Thank you! The I Box works very well and for me the learning curve was short. I would recommend it to everyone.
John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
ERLover wrote:More then very nice John!! Nice contrasting wood and clean, crisp lines and joints. What is an I box, or is that the name of a jig for cutting the box joints? Rockler has one for the router, I am not sure if it can be used on a TS with the miter gauge, inconjuction with a dado blade.
CN, my wood store is charging $7.00 for 4/4 BW, and anything over 10" wide, gets a 10 or 20% Wide Board up charge.
It is an Incra I Box jig made for the table saw. It comes with miter bars for standard table saws and for Shopsmith.
Similar to this? http://www.rockler.com/rockler-router-t ... -joint-jig
I am not a dado guy, when I need dado work I use my router table and some times in conjunction with the table saw regular blade. I just never got into dado blades, there fine tuning for width. I am just more comfortable on the router table with the correct bit.
KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE EQUALS WISDOM. Albert Einstein
The Greatness officially starts
Greenie, Grayling, SS stand alone BS and BS SPT, jointer and belt sander, 3 Ers with Speed Changers. I think those 3 cover my ER needs, and space for them.