Page 13 of 39

Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 10:16 pm
by mickyd
Great looing table Julian. Real professional look. Are coasters for drinks required? :D

Posted: Sun Nov 07, 2010 11:20 pm
by juwester
Thanks gentlemen. Yes, lots of mission furniture -- mostly old -- several pieces bought damaged and repaired with aid of the Shopsmith. Coasters definitely required! :eek:

Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 6:33 am
by burkhome
True definition of craftsman is evident in that table.

Posted: Mon Nov 08, 2010 8:43 am
by rkh2
Nice looking table. Always liked the mission style furniture. The Oak adds to its elegance. Great Job!

Laptop Riser for the Missus

Posted: Thu Nov 18, 2010 3:07 am
by nuhobby
Here is a spare-time project from the last couple of weeks. My wife decided to get a new, higher office chair. She then wanted to move the keyboard and everything above the desk-surface rather than on/below it.

I had one junk miter-gage that I decided to employ (eBay said it was Shopsmith, but on arrival it looked like a knockoff). I re-used it as a Table Trunnion:
[ATTACH]10914[/ATTACH]

The lower wood piece is 2" thick walnut for mass and stability. I cross-cut that on the Power Pro, very cleanly.

Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2010 6:17 pm
by juwester
Chris,

That's a nice laptop stand. One question -- the trunnion that's a repurposed miter gauge -- is there anything on the other side, or is the table pivoting/supported on one point?

Posted: Sun Nov 21, 2010 7:17 pm
by nuhobby
juwester: Hi and thanks!
There is about 3-4" length of the original miter-bar sitting flush in a mortise in the base wood-chunk. The miter's 'pivot' is just above the wood base piece. The miter 'lock knob' would originally be on a threaded stud, but I changed it to a piece of all-thread that goes into both the miter-bar and the wood to help hold it better.
The opposite side of the table sits on a simpler "trunnion." That is just a piece of 3/8" steel dowel that goes into holes on the table-assembly and the base-assembly. It is much like a Shopsmith 500 table, overall.

Posted: Mon Nov 22, 2010 7:27 pm
by juwester
Chris,

Thanks for the explanation. might have to make something similar myself!

Julian.

Posted: Fri Nov 26, 2010 4:10 pm
by mrblanche
Image

Image

An experimental electric guitar. The body and neck are strips of birch furniture-grade plywood, glued up solid. The inlay and fingerboard are purpleheart.

Posted: Fri Nov 26, 2010 4:59 pm
by mickyd
mrblanche wrote:
An experimental electric guitar. The body and neck are strips of birch furniture-grade plywood, glued up solid. The inlay and fingerboard are purpleheart.
Sure gets an A+ for looks. Nice job. You happy with the play?