Chet Posted January 7, 2021 Report Share Posted January 7, 2021 I have to be honest, I have that same block plane and never would have thought of using it for that task. Thanks 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted January 15, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted January 15, 2021 This chapter follows on from "Before the Drawers", in which I should have ended stating, "Now we are one step away from making drawers". And now this chapter is that penultimate step ... I need to explain some of the (as I feel) pedantic details I have been outlining. Firstly, I write this for those who are starting out and those who are seeking ways to increase their accuracy. The steps may not be new to some, but we all like to be reassured that others also find them necessary. Secondly, I am going to introduce a fixture I built that increases not only accuracy, but speeds up a section of the work. This is the first time I have had a chance to try it in a furniture build. So what do we need to do today? Well, we need to cut the drawer parts (minus the drawer bottoms) to build the drawers I spent time selecting the wood for the drawer sides and drawer front-and-back. The sides were jointed and thicknessed by machine, and then stickered for a few days ... The drawer sides are to be 7mm thick, which is more typical of the drawers I build for furniture than a tool cabinet, however the drawers will each house a tray - some sliding and some cantilevered - which effectively doubles the thickness. My aim is to be sturdy but also save space (since the tool cabinet is on the small side, as it must fit under the work bench). The drawer front is 18mm. The drawer back is 12mm. For reference, mentioned at the start of the build, the dimensions are: Dimensions: 660mm x 400mm x 400mm (26" x 15 3/4" x 15 3/4"). Small drawers: 205mm x 70mm (8" x 2 3/4") Large drawers: 305mm x 95" (12" x 3 3/4") http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/UnderbenchCabinet1_html_1bba671c.jpg Time was taken to select the wood for the drawer fronts. The issue here is that I was not after figure, but constancy of grain and colour (although a little tinting could be done with a latter). Lots of combinations tried ... Now to the fixture. Actually, there are two fixtures. I recently posted a design for a Parallel Guide for a slider table saw (mine is a Hammer K3). This article is here: http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Powered%20Tools%20and%20Machinery/ParallelGuideForK3Slider.html http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Powered%20Tools%20and%20Machinery/ParallelGuideForK3Slider_html_1fdf2a4a.jpg The other design I posted was for a Micro Adjust for the crosscut fence: http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Powered%20Tools%20and%20Machinery/CrosscutFenceMicroAdjust.html http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Powered%20Tools%20and%20Machinery/CrosscutFenceMicroAdjust_html_m2c7dfdb0.jpg These new addictions made sizing the drawer fronts and backs much easier, and quicker. Generally, I would rip a board to rough size for the drawer front (and back, since they must be an exact copy of each other), and then fine tune it with a shooting board and hand planes. Well, these tools continue to be used, but I can get pretty close to final dimensions on the slider alone. The parallel guide replaces a rip fence, and it is both safer to use as well as leaving a cleaner finish than off a table saw rip fence. Here is the crosscut fence cutting the width of a drawer front ... With the use of the Micro Adjuster, it is possible to sneak up on the width and "shoot" it with the table saw, to such fine tolerances only previously capable on a shooting board ... Minute adjustments can be made to the cut, with the aim of a tight fit side-to-side. Once the drawer front is done, it is a simple matter to cut the drawer back using the same setting .. Now is the time to rip the height if the drawers fronts and backs (although the drawer backs will receive further shaping at the time of drawer making). This is a test cut. It needs to be repeated for each line of drawers, and checked for each drawer .. As mentioned earlier, the aim is a tight fit throughout ... Once all are done, comes the time to tune each. The main tool use for the upper edge is a shooting board ... Ensure one side fits smoothly ... ... and the other ... The ends need some tuning as well. This is to remove a smidgeon here-and-there, to ease a section where the sides may be touching or even jamming. It may require a shaving, or just dust. The tool of choice here is a block plane. My aim here is a smooth fit - not loose but not tight: at the end, after the dovetailing is done and the sides are glued together, I want the drawer to dry in the drawer case. Therefore, it needs to be able to fit. I expect to do a little tuning still, but the aim now is to prepare for this fit. The drawer back needs to be tuned up identically to the drawer front - the smidgeon "here-and-there" included. So, clamp the parts together ... I prefer a sharp, wide chisel to pare away the excess waste from the drawer back ... This leaves the fronts and backs ready, so ... The last task is to saw the drawer sides. This is made a quick job by the parallel guide, and using the drawer fronts as a template. Once side of a drawer front will dimension the height of that drawer side ... Rip it ... Test the fit in the drawer case. Any tight spots can be removed with a shooting board or block plane. This is what we are after ... ... and eventually ... Now we are ready to start dovetailing. Regards from Perth Derek 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted January 17, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted January 17, 2021 Dovetailing for Blood! Bill and I have been discussing drawer-making. We have different approaches since our target audience is a different group. Bill is better aligned with production work, aiming to build a drawer as quickly as possible. He is less concerned with aesthetics (although his work always looks exceptionally good) and more focussed on finding shortcuts to increase speedier construction. My work is aimed at being the best I can, with a focus on traditional construction completed to as near perfection as I can muster (which sounds grander in words than in practice!). I argue that my drawer-making is quite speedy. The speed comes from minimising unnecessary tasks by planning ahead. This is not immediately apparent in that I use techniques that appear to add extra work. In actual effect, they reduce errors and thereby reduce the time required to tune or repair joinery. My aim is to get it as right as possible - immediately. One example if this is that I do not check whether the drawer is square after glue up ... because the drawer will dry in the drawer case, and so fitting the drawer case is what is important. Now the issue about fitting the drawer case is that this is only possible if the dovetailing is a flush fit, and ready to go into the drawer case. It is expected to be a tightish fit, which will need to receive just a small amount of final tuning. The level of expertise involved here is not really that high; it is more about the approach. I believe anyone can do the same, and this is the motivation to write this chapter. I am sure that Bill will likely do the same ... I look forward to learning from his approach, adding technique to my own. The discussion started when Bill questioned why I had cut all the drawer parts (sans the drawer bottom) for this cabinet ... Bill makes one drawer at a time. He does this as he is concerned the wood will move .. warp or twist .. if it is allowed to rest. My argument is that speed comes from massed repetition: returning to saw all the parts separately is slow. I do not fear the drawer sides moving as I use quarter sawn timber for drawer sides, which is very stable. The wood here is Tasmanian Oak (which is actually an Australian Eucalyptus). The drawer-making process is divided into three stages: first comes the (half-blind) dovetailing of the sides to the front. The groove or slips for the drawer bottom is added later. Secondly, the drawer back is (through) dovetailed to the sides. This relies on the height of the groove, and the reason it is completed later and not up front. Thirdly, the drawer bottom is made and inserted. What I wish to demonstrate here is the first stage: dovetailing the front to the sides. Here are the parts. The Tassie Oak sides are 1/4” (6.35mm) thick and the Jarrah front is 3/4” (18mm). The inside face of the drawer sides is planed to remove any machine marks ... We will cut Tails First, so mark the tail board ... To speed marking of the tails, a template (or story stick) is made. This will set out the tails for the top two rows, six drawers in all. The tails are sawn. Note that there is a line of blue tape to help my aging eyes know when to stop cutting! An important step is to undercut the baselines. This will increase accuracy when paring ... Fretsaw the waste as close to the baseline as possible. I generally leave about 1mm ... Saw away the half sockets at each side, as usual. But now possible to set the chisel in the chisel wall and use a single down stroke to sever all the waste in the internal sockets, leaving the tail board done. Mark the web on the drawer front. For 18-19mm drawer fronts, I keep make this 5mm wide. Once again, to aid visibility, blue tape is applied to underline the baseline ... ... and the pins. Here it extends to the web line ... This next bit is extremely important, and can make-or-break the final result. The tails are transferred to the pin board. A single bevel knife is preferred. This will hug the wall of the socket, and slice the tape in a single stroke. Secondly, the tail board is held firmly by a clamp, and is positioned squarely using a combination square. The square is placed along the reference edge, which is the lower edge of the drawer side. This will switch when the other side is marked out. The importance of this technique cannot be overstated: a squared joint is a prerequisite for a perfect fit. Anything that is not square will require planing, and a lot more tuning. Below is the result of sawing to the line (is the sawing is more accurate than the dropped lines http://www.woodcentral.com/webbbs/smileys/smile.gif In practice, the dropped lines are unnecessary if you have a decent sense of plumb) .... Another time saver comes in the form of deepening the kerfs. This is my version of Tage Frid’s scraper method, a “kerfing chisel”. With the kerfs deepened, remove all the blue tape, and deepen the base lines ... Undercut the baselines to create a chisel wall for each socket ... Chisel in the chisel wall and three moderately firm hammer blows. The chisel wall prevents the chisel moving backwards and over the baseline. This means that chiseling can start at the baseline, itself, and reduces later extra paring ... Split out the waste ... With hard Jarrah and a decent Japanese chisel, it takes me three rows to get within 3mm (1/8”) of the web line. I stop at this point ... This is repeated at the other end of the board ... Back to the Moxon Vise: the sockets are cleared by paring the remainder in 1mm slices .. Cleaning out the socket was facilitated by earlier extending the kerfs, and now with a corner chisel ... It is all about “release cuts”, as David Charlesworth has written in his articles over the years. Create a release cut, and waste will fall away without a fight. The deepened kerfs mean that there is no further paring needed at the sides of the sockets. Clearing the waste is a matter of splitting it out. The chopping is a release cut here. Finally! The dovetailed sides are tapped into the sockets of the drawer front. The goal here is that they fit “off the saw”, and no further work is needed? Note that the small section here does not only protect the surface, but it ensures it is driven flush ... How did we do? Here is one side ... And here is the other side with the “drawer” inserted into the drawer case ... The drawer can be pushed flush into the drawer case, which was the target at the start ... Regards from Perth Derek 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardA Posted January 17, 2021 Report Share Posted January 17, 2021 Love your explainations. I'm seeing, that at my age I need to use the blue tape trick as well. Ain't it a PITA getting older? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Bmac Posted January 17, 2021 Report Share Posted January 17, 2021 Super posts as usual. The kerfing chisel is really handy, that uncut area in the half blind dovetail is always a pain. It's pretty amazing to me it does the job with a square edge, but as you said it's the thickness of the chisel that does the job. I also see you recently added a page to your website that goes into making one, very well done. Question about your comment on your website that Tage Frid used a piece of a bandsaw blade for this. How do he use that with no handle? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
derekcohen Posted January 17, 2021 Author Report Share Posted January 17, 2021 Quote Question about your comment on your website that Tage Frid used a piece of a bandsaw blade for this. How do he use that with no handle? He used it in the same way as a scraper blade - removed the teeth and hammered it in. Regards from Perth Derek Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Don Z. Posted January 17, 2021 Report Share Posted January 17, 2021 5 hours ago, RichardA said: Ain't it a PITA getting older? Yeah... but it sure beats the alternative, doesn't it? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
RichardA Posted January 17, 2021 Report Share Posted January 17, 2021 20 minutes ago, Don Z. said: Yeah... but it sure beats the alternative, doesn't it? Maybe, but then we really don't know do we? 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted January 18, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted January 18, 2021 Cock ups I recently wrote that I aim to build as best as I can. Sometimes it does not go well at all I make two repairs today. Usually, the mistakes I make are as I get spatially challenged, and cut the wrong side of the board. The first one here was being a little over-enthusiastic with a block plane when trimming a drawer front (a few days ago). The problem is difficult to detect from a distance ... ... but close up .... ! Damn. The drawer front is part of a set of three. It cannot simply be replaced. One also cannot glue a filler to the side of the board. But one can add a filler to the drawer divider ... Here it is glued proud ... When trimmed flush, it is nearly invisible. With a coat of finish, it will be ... The second fix was this ... after all the mention I made about the importance of a combination square to ensure the side was square to the drawer front ... well, one got away from me. When I placed the three sides on a flat surface, the far end of one side was about 3mm high. This was the fix. Can you spot the repair? Eagle eyes will note that there is a light line. This is where a triangular fillet was glued in, and planed flush (The corresponding top side needed to be planed down to fit inside the drawer case). Regards from Perth Derek 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pkinneb Posted January 18, 2021 Report Share Posted January 18, 2021 Thanks for sharing! Great fixes. I had to look hard for the second one and then noticed your arrow lol Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Tpt life Posted January 18, 2021 Report Share Posted January 18, 2021 My dad always said that getting good at a thing, was to know how to fix mistakes. Good on ya. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted February 7, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted February 7, 2021 Perhaps I need to explain the title, "Dovetailing for Blood". In part, the description comes from a book, "Backgammon for Blood", by Peter Becker I read about 4 decades ago. It's about taking the game to the most competitive level. This series of articles is not a how-to about dovetailing; it is about the strategies I use when building drawers. I offer them for discussion and your interest. This is the drawer in question. In the previous article, the focus was on strategies for connecting the drawer front and drawer sides via half-blind dovetails. The aim there - and continued here - is to complete the dovetailing in such as way that the drawer may be glued up, and dry inside the drawer case. The advantage of drying inside the drawer case is that a good fit is assured. Today the drawer back needs to be attached with through dovetails. For interest, here are the chisels I used: Kiyohisa slicks and Koyamaichi dovetail. Noticeable in the drawer above is that there are no grooves for the drawer bottom. These will now be added using a plough plane and a sticking board to hold the work... The drawer sides are around 7mm at this stage, with the expectation that they will end up at 6mm. The inside and outside faces have been planed. The groove is 3mm deep ... The groove in the 18mm thick drawer front is 6mm deep ... The drawer back receives a shallow groove ... Reason? The drawers are designed for a tool cabinet. Unlike drawers for the home, where the backs are lowered, these drawers will have a full rear, in height, ending at the drawer bottom. We start with drawer backs exactly the same dimensions as the drawer front. The lower section needs to be removed. The top of the groove marks this position. The waste is removed on the table saw, a smidgeon grace ... ... and the machine marks then planed away. It needs to be stated that drawers are not the same as boxes. While they may both be dovetailed, the drawer width is determined by width of the drawer case. It cannot be larger or be smaller. The drawer front and back are made as a pair, and their dimensions are not permitted to be altered. With boxes, one can leave dovetails proud, and then level them to the sides. Or one may level the sides to the dovetails. You cannot do this with drawers, especially if the game plan is to aim for the glued up drawer drying in the drawer case. Consequently, the dovetails must end up flush with the surface .... We move over to dovetailing the rear: The first step, with 6 drawers of the same height and width, is to make a template for the spacing of the dovetails. While the template stretches across the board, the area of importance is above the drawer bottom. Mark out the tails, as usual, but then flip the board so that you are sawing from the inside of the drawer ... Again, this is not a box. The inside of a drawer is seen, and it is important to keep the baseline as clean as possible, that is, no over-sawing. Similarly, when removing the waste with a chisel, start with the outside face of the drawer, and finish with the inside. That way there is less danger of inadvertently chiseling over the baseline. Now ... the interesting part comes with transferring tails to pins. This can make-or-break the drawer. Here we see the tail and pin boards aligned. But are they? A square shows that the side is out at least 1-2mm at 300mm (12"). Left like this, the drawer will not sit flat. It will act as if it has a twist. Significant efforts will need to be made to align the drawer in the case. It becomes essential that the side is aligned accurately. This can be a little fiddly, but a long square helps considerably ... At some point, someone will mention the side-alignment fixture designed by David Barron. This is a wonderful concept, however it excels at making boxes and not drawers. Look here ... The tail and pin boards are not aligned at the square ends (which would enable David's fixture to be used). They are aligned on the reference side, which is the lower edge of the drawer sides. You are aligning from the left side of these boards ... Having transferred and sawn the tails, the bulk of the waste is removed with a fretsaw (as detailed before). Here is a reminder - first chop out the waste from the outside face, half way down ... ... and then complete from the show-inside face. My preference is to angle the chisel slightly away and create a "tent" ... This is then removed with a slicing paring action, again form each side to the centre ... Use a narrow chisel to pare the ends: having first sawn these away, the remnants for paring lie above the chisel walls (again discussed in a previous article) .. This is what we are after: flat ... Dry fit ... The drawer must fit the drawer case ... It does, but we are not finished. More in a while .. Regards from Perth Derek 3 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted February 7, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted February 7, 2021 The aim is to glue up the assembled drawer and let it dry in the drawer case. This drawer fits ... ... however it is a tight squeeze and I know that there are issues which need to be corrected before glue is applied. It is the same for every drawer. Each drawer needs to go through an assessment, trouble-shooting for issues, until the drawer moves smoothly. I need to point out at this stage that, although drawers are made in batches (a row), each drawer is fitted, tuned, and glued up before assembling the next drawer. At this stage, six (of ten) drawers have been completed to this stage. There is one further stage after this chapter. So we pull the drawer out of the case. It comes out with effort. The sides twist slightly - I can feel one side is moving more freely than the other. Something is causing it to hang up. Examining the half-blind dovetails, the first item of note is that there is a slightly raised pin ... Since the drawer is a dry fit, it is a simple matter to knock it apart to make any fixes. The pin is planed flat. I note that the one drawer side sits a little proud at the underside, about 1mm ... maybe not even that much .. This is also planed down. The drawer back is presented to the case opening ... It is a tight fit now. It will be a tighter fit later if there is moisture in the air. The drawer back is removed and the height planed down by about 1mm. Re-assembled, the sides now are higher ... The sides are planed to the side height ... I can still feel a little more stickiness on one side. Are the sides flat, or has there a cup developed to create a high spot? Yes. Slight but it is there ... Plane this flat. Just a few thin shavings ... Now the drawer is moving well - it feels taut, but free. The case is waxed, not so much at this stage to promote ease of movement, but to prevent any glue adhering to the sides .. Now we are ready to glue the drawer parts. Here are the items involved ... I am using Titebond Liquid Hide Glue. I like that it has a longer open time, that it is reversible, repairable, and cleans up with water. There is a spatula for application, a fishtail chisel handy if a corner needs to be cleaned, a small mallet, and a wet rag. The hide glue is decanted into a small bottle ... This small bottle is a game changer! I was watching Rob Cosman and noted that he used small bottles as well. I found a bunch on eBay. What they do is let you deposit glue in exactly the spot you want to do, and then the spatula lets you spread it around. I only glue one side of the joint, but there is enough for both sides ... It is important that the sides are seated flush ... The drawer looks good ... ... and, importantly, slides into the case smoothly and firmly. Regards from Perth Derek 4 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted March 17, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted March 17, 2021 Drawer Bottom and Slips One of the least pleasurable areas of drawer making is fitting drawer bottoms. Why? Because there always seems more to do than anticipated - there are more panels to machine to thickness and area, and this feels like it is endless. Mindless. Before starting on the bottoms, the drawer fronts are planed, chipped dovetails repaired, and fine-tuning of the bottom-less drawer is completed ... Link to the fixture here: http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ShopMadeTools/DrawerPlaningFixture.html One of the rules I set for myself at the start of this project was that, being a just for the workshop, I would use as much scrap or cheap wood as I could scrounge up. The Jarrah drawer fronts are the exception. The case is Merbau stained to match the Jarrah drawer fronts. Over various projects, I save bits which I think may be used ... don't we all For now, offcuts of Tasmanian Oak, which make great drawer sides and drawer bottoms. Modern machines, such as jointers and thicknesser/planers, enable the redesign of cabinet parts. In this case, drawer bottoms. One can use the minimum thickness, saving weight and wood. I am very fortunate to own a Hammer A3-31, which turns the scrap into usable boards ... These boards ended up a smidgeon over 5mm thick. The grooves in the drawer sides are 5mm wide and 3mm deep. The drawer sides are 6-7mm thick. Joining such thin boards is quite easy - no clamps used. Just blue tape Butt two boards, and stretch the tape across the join. The blue tape has some flex to it, and the stretch contracts and pulls the joint tight ... Do this with all the joins, and then lay a strip down the seam (which is to prevent glue squeezing out ... Flip the boards and insert glue into the seam. Wiggle the boards open-and-closed to spread it evenly. Lay flat and wipe away the glue (Titebond II) squeeze out with a wet rag. Freshen this for each join. Yes, I know many warn against this practice, but I have not experienced any problem with finishes. Once clean, tape the side to hold the joins tightly together ... The machining and glueing takes all day, and finally ... Of course - Murphy's Law - the next day I discover that I am going to be one drawer short, and more offcuts are found and glued together. Smaller pieces this time ... Then it is time to unwrap the presents and make a blue tape Christmas tree ... The drawer bottoms are roughly sized, and the top side is sanded to 240 grit (the underside will not be seen, so just leave it be) ... Why sand? Well, it is just easier. The panels are curvy, not flat, and would be too awkward to hand plane. This is what sanders are for. What I have here is a Mirka Ceros, which uses Abranet mesh. Hooked up to a vacuum cleaner, the result is the closest thing to dustless sanding. One edge on the underside receives a very shallow rebate. This is to enable the panel to fit the groove. The plane here is a Veritas skew block plane, which has a nicker as it is planing across the grain. It has a fence and a depth stop. Great little plane .. The width of the panel is measured. Note that the drawer bottom runs across the drawer (expansion then takes place front-to-back) ... After ripping to size on the table saw, fine tuning takes place with a shooting board ... Time to fit the drawer bottom. Of course, if it is too tight, it will not run smoothly. But even if it appears to run smoothly, it can be creating a potential problem. In the earlier chapters (Dovetailing for Blood), one aim was to make the dovetails an exact depth so that the newly glued drawer could dry in the drawer case. The other aim was to fine tune the drawer (minus the drawer bottom) to move smoothly in the drawer case. Now, if when adding the drawer bottom, the smoothness is lost, then we know that something is wrong. So, the drawer bottom is dropped part way ... ... and this is presented to the drawer case at this point. Will it run as smoothly as before? If the drawer appears to have tightened in the case, the problem may be that the sides are slightly bowed. Try tapping the sides to push them flat ... The drawer bottom is lowered further, and again tested for fit ... All good, and the bottom is tapped into the groove behind the drawer front. A good fit Slips are a traditional way of reinforcing thin drawer sides to increase the surface area and reduce wear over time to the runners. Usually when making slips, I would groove the slip rather than, as here, the drawer side. Here is one of Richard Jones' wonderful illustrations ... http://www.inthewoodshop.com/Furniture/DrawerDesignandDrawerBottoms_html_4ce48252.jpg I decided to do something a little different this time. I am not sure whether this can be termed a true slip, but it functions exactly the same way. The drawer sides have a shallow 3mm groove. To support the thin drawer side, as well as support the drawer, a 6mm square Jarrah section was glued to the drawer side directly under the drawer bottom. Care was taken to allow the drawer bottom to remain free to move. Drawer stops were added ... All the drawers fit and move smoothly ... And this is what it looks like at present ... Of course, there is the case back to make, and the handles to fit .... and then the fun bit begins - fitting out each of the 10 drawers for tools. Lots to do still. Regards from Perth Derek 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
bradpotts Posted March 17, 2021 Report Share Posted March 17, 2021 Turned out great! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
pkinneb Posted March 17, 2021 Report Share Posted March 17, 2021 Nice!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Coop Posted March 19, 2021 Report Share Posted March 19, 2021 Damn, that’s sweet! Very well done! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted March 22, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted March 22, 2021 These are final pictures of Stage One. "Stage One" - what does that mean? Well, the first step is to build the cabinet under the bench. The second stage will be to fit out the drawers for the tools. I plan to do some of the latter shortly, and some later. I will post these as they are done. For now, here is the underbench cabinet ... The rear, before the back was installed ... The front. The ring pulls are antiqued brass (they are not shiny). I need to work them a little more to remove the still-new look. These were chosen as they drop down and do not project out from the front of the cabinet ... Under the bench ... The bench top received a little flattening, and a single coat of danish oil ... Someone is sure to ask why the cabinet is low. The answer is that there needs to be space for hold downs ... The drawers manage about 90% extension ... One of the first fit outs will involve this set of Kiyohisa bench chisels I have been collecting one-by-one (these are no longer available) ... And here is one of the small drawers ... Thanks for supporting the build to date. Hopefully there were some aspects that will prove helpful. Regards from Perth Derek 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted April 7, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted April 7, 2021 What lies behind drawer #1? The underbench cabinet is done .... ... and now the drawers are being filled, starting with the centre drawer in the top row. There are 10 drawers in all, and the aim is to use the space as efficiently as possible. Into this cabinet will be those tools I want close at hand, and to access readily. The centre drawers in the top two rows are for marking tools. The top drawer will be for squares I use all the time. Opening the drawer produces a 300mm Starrett combination square, a 150mm Starrett double square, and a Veritas Sliding Square. these are french fitted into a Jarrah panel (more on the french fitting shortly). ... Now you know how I like secret drawers - well, if you slide this panel back ... ... you find the treasure drawer with a pair of Colen Clenton mitre squares infilled in Sheoak, and pair of Chris Vesper 4" and 7" squares infilled in Tasmanian Blackwood, and a 2x2" Bridge City saddle square ... The Jarrah panel for the latter squares is a loose fit, snug at the sides and about 5mm of expansion space at the end. At the right side of the photo are the rails, which were glued to the sides (but not the loose panel) Below is the upper panel for the Starretts and Veritas squares. The panel needed to be thin - it is 6mm thick - and cut outs made rather than french fitted. This was to save space by having the tools hanging down rather than sticking up. The eagle eyed will have noticed that the rear of the drawer was cut away. This was to allow for the upper tray to slide past the drawer back, which takes advantage of the space behind the drawer when it is opened. There was a little extra shaping as the body of the Veritas hung down lower than the other squares. The upper tray runs on the Jarrah rails attached to the inside of the drawer sides. Finally, there is a rail added above the tray to prevent it tipping as it is slid back. This is in the same Tasmanian Oak as the drawer sides. The drawer manages about 90% extension without any support. Regards from Perth Derek 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted April 17, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted April 17, 2021 Drawer #2 - the skeleton drawer Here is the second drawer to be filled ... Why "Skeleton Drawer"? Well, it does not contain dark secrets, buried bodies, or other clandestine material http://www.woodcentral.com/webbbs/smileys/biggrin.gif It is just the name I have given to the drawer design since, unlike Drawer #1, which hid a jewellery layer, this discloses all from the outset. The drawer holds my Kiyohisa chisels: paring slicks and bench oire nomi. It is important to be able to find, and extract them easily when working at the bench. The paring chisels lie in the upper level ... These slide into the cabinet and, below, are the oire nomi (3mm through 30mm) ... There are two others at the rear, a second 30mm and a 36mm ... This is a clearer presentation ... The chisels lie on shaped rests. The blades lie on rare earth magnets, which prevent them moving from the rests when the drawer is opened and shut, or the top layer extended into the cabinet ... The wood used for the rests and the slide is West Australian Sheoak ... The rear of the drawer, the drawer back, has been cut away above the second dovetail. This is how the the top layer slides into the cabinet ... I trust you are finding this fun as well http://www.woodcentral.com/webbbs/smileys/smile.gif Regards from Perth Derek 8 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
VizslaDad Posted April 19, 2021 Report Share Posted April 19, 2021 @derekcohen hopefully my chisels I currently have lying dormant, wrapped in newspaper in some hastily-constructed, glued-and-nailed plywood drawers never see your posts because then they will know the true extent of their neglect. Your builds are a great inspiration for what I'd like to do when I can make more time in the shop. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted April 26, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted April 26, 2021 Drawers 3 and 4 Moving across to top right. This is a drawer for wheel cutting gauges ... I went through many ideas before coming up with this design. Simple, but effective for access and keeping the gauges from moving around. Two Tite Marks with fine adjusters and two Veritas gauges (these were a steal several years ago - Anniversary gauges in stainless steel. Brilliant!). The gauge at the front is one I built. My idea of Veritas-going-Japanese Everything is removable. The slots for the arms were made with a fluting blade in a Veritas Combination Plane ... Drawer #4 was much more work. Much more. This is the middle drawer, second row. The drawer above holds large squares. This drawer holds more squares, small ones for joinery .... The only way to keep these from moving around in a drawer is to french fit them ... The little "dot" at the top end is a rare earth magnet. This is to keep extra blades (for the squares) from getting lost. This is where I moved the Veritas sliding square. There is a Vesper small double square along with a similar Starrett. These are so useful for checking dovetail sockets. Below is my favourite double square, a 4" Moore & Wright, along with a 4" vintage Browne & Sharpe machinist square. Now slide the top tray away, and below are large and small Starrett dividers, and a vintage Starrett compass ... Again french fit to prevent any sliding around ... I managed to get all these rules inside the drawer - Starrett and Mitutoyo in metric and imperial ... Easier to stack them this way ... Two more drawers, and I am going to call it quits for a while. Lynndy has orders for night stands. I hope you are still having fun! Regards from Perth Derek 5 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Popular Post derekcohen Posted May 8, 2021 Author Popular Post Report Share Posted May 8, 2021 Drawer #5: french fitted sliding bevels (Shinwa, Stanley and Chris Vesper) ... Drawer #6: This one is about the tools ... just because I think that they are beautiful, and I love using them. They give me joy. All the tools in this cabinet have a story, or a connection. This is one of the reasons I keep them, even though I do not "need" them as I have others. All get used. In the case of the chisels in this drawer, they are my go-to for dovetails and close-up detail work. Mainly because they are all fully bevelled at the sides and have minimal lands. In spite of the absence of hoops, all may be used with mallet. The condition here being that the mallet head is UHMW. This is firm for feedback but yielding to avoid damage. This is another skeleton drawer. The top tray are home to Veritas PM-V11 chisels. Most here are aware that I have road-tested tools for Lee Valley (Veritas) for many years. Not only are these just superb chisels, but I like the way they feel in the hand, particularly the smaller sizes. For dovetails, these run 1/8" upwards to 1". The five on the left have custom Ebony handles (they are also round and not shaped with flats). The far right is a fishtail I made from a spare (pre-production) 3/8" chisel. I am sure that Veritas will have fishtails for sale at some stage. This is my design, not theirs (I have no idea what they have in mind). The lower tray house Blue Spruce dovetail/detail chisels. This was the first set of premium chisels I purchased. Dave Jeske had just begun making them, and I was one of the first to order. In fact, the 3/4" (which is the largest size here) was the first made. I asked Dave for a 3/4". He had made 2, one for another order, and sent me the spare. I sent it back. His idea at the time was to make the steel thicker as the chisels became wider, and the one he sent was 3/16" thick. It felt heavy and clumsy. I requested 1/8", and that is what che then made for me. My one concern about the chisels, prior to purchase, was that they are A2 steel, and that, for paring, a 30 degree bevel might not be ideal. Then it dawned on me that all the Japanese chisels I had were 30 degrees ... These blades get very sharp. They do not hold an edge as long as PM-V11, and need to be honed more frequently. But that does not detract from the absolute pleasure in using them. These are light blades in beautiful African Blackwood handles. Sized 1/8", 3/16" and up to 3/4". There are two 1/4" skew chisels. I nagged Dave to make a fishtail, but he was skeptical there was an advantage over the skews (there is indeed a big advantage when cleaning out socket corners). Later he did make them, and I chanced on a sale of tools at a deceased estate in Oz. They had not been used, which brought me some sadness for the previous owner. Drawer #7. Here is another drawer holding cutting and marking gauges. This is a drawer intended to be dedicated to wooden mortice and cutting gauges, but does have two wheel gauges that could not be fitted elsewhere. The mortices gauges fall into these three types ... Veritas Dual Marking Gauge, Kinshiro, and one of my designs. The Kinshiro is my absolute favourite, and I was gifted one several years ago (thanks Wiley!). Found another about a year back. They are no longer made by Kinshiro, and no longer available. I have made a number of single-blade cutting gauges in a similar manner to these double-blade gauges. The Kinshiro may be used as single blade gauges as well, plus one can set up a reversed blade as well, which is useful when paring shallow mortice walls, such as here! The shopmade mortice gauge is in the style of Kinshiro, but uses a cassette to house double-sided blades to match a range of mortice and tenon widths ... Here is the drawer ... Bottom right is a cutting gauge from Colen Clenton. This was a prize in an Australian tool making competition in 2009. The holders are made from Hard Maple ... Regards from Perth Derek 6 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Belle City WW Posted June 24, 2021 Report Share Posted June 24, 2021 Beautiful work Derek!!! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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