Saw this on New Yankee Workshop--?

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pinkiewerewolf
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Post by pinkiewerewolf »

Great discussion on several levels, glue-ups and tool safety.
Thanks guys, I can use all the new knowledge and safety reminders I can get.;)
John, aka. Pinkie. 1-520, 1-510 & a Shorty, OPR. 520 upgrade, Band Saw, Jig Saw, scroll saw, Jointer, Jointech Saw Train.:) Delta Benchtop planer, Makita LS1016L 10" sliding compound miter saw, Trojan manf. (US Made)Miter saw work center, MiniMax MM16 bandsaw.
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ardie2522
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Post by ardie2522 »

Norm always begins a show by telling you to "read, follow, and understand the safety directions" and then goes on to show you his safety glasses.

They remove the guards from the equipment so the cameraman can get a better shot of his work. Nobody wants to see a chunk of wood being fed into a planer and popping out the other end looking perfect. We viewers want to see the shiny, spinning blades, the twirling drill bits, the dancing nail gun, and the ever-fascinating dovetail jig, even if he's building a milk crate.

I believe the sponsors want us to see their tools in action, too. Not covered up by all those pesky OCHSA guards made for people who don't know that tools are *supposed* to be sharp and deadly.

-- Ardie
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JPG
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Post by JPG »

O C H S A ???? Osha?:)
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╟JPG ╢
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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
E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
baysidebob
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Post by baysidebob »

I thought it was OUCH-SA.....
I keep finding little windows on this forum, that I don't really know what they do. So sometimes I experiment. Probably shouldn't do that, I know in my shop it can get me into trouble.
Bayside Bob
mbcabinetmaker
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glue-glue-glue

Post by mbcabinetmaker »

[quote="charlese"]Dwight- it is very hard to over-glue a joint.


That is what I thought until my friend Danny helped me one day. I told him he could not get to much glue on the joint...:D .... I looked over in a few minutes and he had it dripping off his elbows!

Mark
charlese
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Post by charlese »

Wow, Mark! :D I guess there's an exception to every rule. However as I said - "It's very hard to ...."

Did Danny get it washed off? Or was he a little stiff armed for a while.
Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
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mbcabinetmaker
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All cleaned up

Post by mbcabinetmaker »

Good thing it washes off with water. I think he decided to stick with his day job though.

Mark
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reible
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Post by reible »

Sorry but I can't help it.... did he use all that glue to "stick" to his day job?

Ed

mbcabinetmaker wrote:Good thing it washes off with water. I think he decided to stick with his with his day job though.

Mark
{Knight of the Shopsmith} [Hero's don't wear capes, they wear dog tags]
mtobey
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Post by mtobey »

+ 5 points on the grin-o-meter!
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cincinnati10
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Only Time Not to Glue Edge

Post by cincinnati10 »

The only time I have seen Norm not glue an edge is when he is joining end grain to long grain like in a breadboard edge to a table. This is to account for wood movement. In this case you would glue all the biscuits in one piece. Then only apply glue to the center biscuit in the breadboard cap. Usually, the ends are pinned into slots. The biscuits are used to maintain alignment.
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