Nested Tables Finished

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shydragon
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Nested Tables Finished

Post by shydragon »

Mission Style, made from Oregon Madrone

[ATTACH]9634[/ATTACH]

Hope, I attached this corrrectly
Attachments
Three Tables 00001_web.jpg
Three Tables 00001_web.jpg (233.02 KiB) Viewed 2995 times
Pat

Oregon

1992 SS 510, 11" Bandsaw on power station, 4" jointer, Pro Planer, Incra Miter 2000, Incra Ultimate Fence Router Pkg, Grizzly 6" Parallelogram Jointer.
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dusty
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Post by dusty »

Very, very nice. Two or three more projects like this and you should have accumulated quite a few points.;)
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beeg
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Post by beeg »

Very NICE looking tables. How is it working with madrone?
SS 500(09/1980), DC3300, jointer, bandsaw, belt sander, Strip Sander, drum sanders,molder, dado, biscuit joiner, universal lathe tool rest, Oneway talon chuck, router bits & chucks and a De Walt 735 planer,a #5,#6, block planes. ALL in a 100 square foot shop.
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Bob
shydragon
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Post by shydragon »

I bought a pickup load at .80 a bft. But, the wood varies so much in grain and color. Some of it is straight grain, some swirly, some of it is quilted. Because it is rought sawn, it is hard to tell what you have, until you start working it. It rips and crosscuts fine. On some of the quilted stuff, some tearout on planing. But, hard on drill bits.
Pat

Oregon

1992 SS 510, 11" Bandsaw on power station, 4" jointer, Pro Planer, Incra Miter 2000, Incra Ultimate Fence Router Pkg, Grizzly 6" Parallelogram Jointer.
charlese
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Post by charlese »

Hey there, Pat! Super nifty nesting tables! Very nice work! My wife also likes the blue color of the overstuffed chair.
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dlbristol
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Post by dlbristol »

I like the wood and the design. Nice execution as well! Scratch or Plans?
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efmaron
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Post by efmaron »

Great looking tables, very nicely done
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JPG
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Post by JPG »

shydragon wrote:Mission Style, made from Oregon Madrone

[ATTACH]9634[/ATTACH]

Hope, I attached this corrrectly
You attached them quite well!

Oh!, the tables are quite nicely done also!:D
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Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10
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shipwright
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Post by shipwright »

shydragon wrote: But, the wood varies so much in grain and color. Some of it is straight grain, some swirly, some of it is quilted. Because it is rought sawn, it is hard to tell what you have, until you start working it. It rips and crosscuts fine. On some of the quilted stuff, some tearout on planing. But, hard on drill bits.


I haven't had that much trouble with drilling it but otherwise agree. I love the stuff for its subtle colours and fine texture. I have about 100 fbm of it that came from a big tree by my shop. I dried it in my kiln and have made some nice tables and boxes from it. Here in B.C. we call it Arbutus but it's as far as I can tell the same tree.

Paul M
Paul M ........ The early bird gets the worm but the second mouse gets the cheese
shydragon
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Post by shydragon »

Roughly, I have just over 100 bft left. I keep thinking I should just skip plane it to see what it looks likes. It's 1-1/2" thick. When doing edge glue ups, I end up with such varying grain, I don't think it looks right.
Pat

Oregon

1992 SS 510, 11" Bandsaw on power station, 4" jointer, Pro Planer, Incra Miter 2000, Incra Ultimate Fence Router Pkg, Grizzly 6" Parallelogram Jointer.
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