A lot is happening in the shop!
My local lumber yard convinced me to try "Spanish Cedar". I brought home a rough board that was 8/4" by 6.5" by 8', which is enough to get the two rails and one stile I need to replace.
Spanish Cedar is a hardwood from South American that is NOT related to either Western Red Cedar or the Eastern aromatic cedar. It has a beautiful redish color (irrelevant since it will be painted) and supposedly has good rot and termite resistance (which is relevant for my application). But the wood is frustrating to work with. It machines beautifully with the grain; any work against the grain results in tear out, fuzz and stringing unlike anything I've ever worked with before.
At 6.5" wide, the rough board I bought was half an inch too wide to face joint on my 6" Grizzly jointer so I edge jointed it first, thinking I'd then rip off the 1/2" and finish jointing it. It was really too large and heavy for me to easily handle on the jointer. In retrospect, I should have snapped a line down the middle and ripped it first free hand on the band saw. Lesson learned. But I somehow got the job done.
After getting the first edge jointed it was time to rip that 1/2" off so I could finish with the dimensioning. Just in time for the project

, I had ordered the Kreg Band Saw Fence while it was on sale. It arrived in a couple of days. By the way, when you order the Shopsmith version of the Kreg band saw fence you get a "free"

20" aluminum miter extension because the band saw fence extrusion that comes with Shopsmith version of the Kreg fence is the exact same as the Shopsmith 20" aluminum miter extension p/n 556005. The Shopsmith portion of the manual makes this point. The fence easily installed and was adjusted for the drift of my 5/8" band saw blade. Probably took 30 minutes, tops. Using the newly installed Kreg, I easily riped that half inch off the board. The cut off the blade was excellent and it went like butter through the 8/4" Spanish Cedar. Unfortunately I forgot to document this part of the project.

But I used the same set up as in the photos below.
I am really impressed with the Kreg fence, the 5/8" blade and, of course, the Mark V itself. I should say that up until this project, I had mostly used the table saw for ripping and thought the band saw's main function was to cut curves. I may have to rethink that.
After getting the board down to a width that could be managed on my jointer, I face jointed it and then thicknessed it. Again no photos, but I can report that my planer stand, which some thought would be too flimsy, easily handled the load.
Then back to the Mark V to rip it in half (this will allow me to get one stile and two rails out of the board) on the band saw. Here's a couple of after photos of that cut showing the Shopsmith set up. Using both floating tables, the main table and the extension table I had plenty of infeed and outfeed support. Same set up I used to make the first rip (but I forgot to take photos). I can't imagine how I could have done this on any other band saw without a lot of temporary supports and/or helpers. I am really impressed with the accuracy and quality of the cut I got straight off the blade using the Kreg fence.
Sorry for the lousy photos.
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After this, it was time to cross cut one of the long pieces to make the two rails. Similar set up.
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By the way, the barely visible extension of the miter gauge is just a piece of plywood covered in a 3M anti-slip tape. I stated using this stuff a few months ago. Highly recommend the stuff -- it grips much better than sandpaper, which is what I have used in the past. Very helpful especially on the Mark V if you are doing a beveled cross cut. Really reduces the tendency for the main piece and the cut off to want to slide.
That's all for today.