Birdfeeder Construction Advice

This is a forum for intermediate to advanced woodworkers. Show off your projects or share your ideas.

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dgale
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Post by dgale »

johnheyd wrote:I remember in high school shop a lot of guys were making toboggans out of oak and they heated the ends of wood slats in boiling water for a period of time, then put then in a jig were they bent them. After then cooled they held that shape. So my thought is perhaps if you have an old turkey fryer, try boiling a redwood plank for about four hours - then clamp it into a jig to form the shape - let it cool and I'll bet you would have a curved form.
Wow - interesting thought. When I lived up in Port Townsend WA about 20+ years ago, there was a wooden boat building school up there and they had big wood steamers that you could put long boards into and then after steaming, bend and contort into the desired shape - obviously overkill for this project but your idea reminded me of that. I'll havew to ponder how to make the jig but I like your idea and there's really not much to lose in giving it a try.
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'82 Mark V 500 #96309
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danscot
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Post by danscot »

I'll havew to ponder how to make the jig but I like your idea and there's really not much to lose in giving it a try.
I wonder if a heavy gauge plastic drain pipe would give you the desired inside radius for this?
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dgale
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Post by dgale »

danscot wrote:I wonder if a heavy gauge plastic drain pipe would give you the desired inside radius for this?
I was thinking the same thing - the correct diameter ABS or schedule 40 PVC, with ratcheting straps around it to bend the wood to that profile and clamp it until it dries...definitely worth a try. Fortunately around me finding some salvaged tight-grain clear redwood is fairly easy to do.
'78 Mark V 500 #27995 (my Dad bought new)
'82 Mark V 500 #96309
Two '47 10E's (serial#4314+6149) - one a dedicated drill press and the other a lathe
Two 10E/ER in parts slowly being restored…#26822 and #????? (SS plate missing)
SPT's: Bandsaw, Belt Sander, Strip Sander, Jointer, Jigsaw, Biscuit Joiner
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JPG
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Post by JPG »

Anyone paying attention to grain direction?:D

I can understand toboggan strip bending, but creating cupping?:confused:
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lightnin
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Post by lightnin »

Perhaps a hexagonal shape... two sides glass four sides wood.
That's all flat sides just angles to worry about.
Or one side glass.. the side facing the ornithologist's kitchen window.
Bruce

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Three days later I owned one...
One week later I was rebuilding one...
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