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Small Cabin Forum / Off Topic / If You Are Not Doing Stuff Directly Related To Cabins....
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ICC
Member
# Posted: 9 Apr 2024 20:32
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... what do you like to do?

I have a few different pursuits that don't directly relate to Cabin building, maintenance, or renovating.

One that I spend a fair amount of time on is woodwork. Creating things that to some degree are decorative, but can also be functional. I shall illustrate with three projects I did this past week. My family took very good care of my home while I was away. These things are going to be gifted as a token of thanks.

I will post images and a short description in following posts.

If you have favorite pastimes, not directly related to cabin building, maintenance or remodeling you could join in if you wish.

ICC
Member
# Posted: 9 Apr 2024 20:39
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Wood box made from pine and walnut and stained. The corners use finger joints, sometimes called a box joint. The box is about 6" x 3-1/4 x 2-1/2". The hinges stop opening at 90 degrees as shown.
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ICC
Member
# Posted: 9 Apr 2024 20:45
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Another wood box. This one is about 7 x 4-1/4 x 2-7/8". Box jointed corners again. This is a wood from Africa called Ebiara. It is NOT stained at all. Just finished with spray lacquer. The lacquer has darkened the color a little, but has not changed the actual color. The 90-degree stop hinges I want are on their way from Canada.
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ICC
Member
# Posted: 9 Apr 2024 20:56 - Edited by: ICC
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A third box, but this time a bandsaw box. A piece of 1-1/2" thick US hard maple was sandwiched and glued with two pieces of 3/4" leopardwood from Central or South America. The width is 3-1/2" across the front. The height is 2-1/4" and the depth 2-3/4".

A bandsaw is used to cut slices off the glue-laminated block in a sequence. Components are then glued back together while the center piece that was the box drawer cavity is left out. 1/8" bandsaw blade x 0.018" thick and 14 TPI.

I can describe the process if anyone wants, or google can find pictures and videos if a "bandsaw box" search is performed.

Clear spray lacquer for the finish, no stains. I used Titebond glue for some of the glue joints and cyanoacrylate for others.
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paulz
Member
# Posted: 10 Apr 2024 10:11
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Those a beautiful ICC!

I never got into woodwork much, aside from building the cabin. Coincidentally though, my cabin night stand platform is this cutting board I made in high school wood shop (mandatory classes back then). Nice to have the 50 year old memory sitting there.

These days I don’t do much beyond keeping the grounds livable, cooking and cleaning. One thing I do in the dark evening hours is jigsaw puzzles. Not very admirable but at least it keeps my mind working. Probably done 50, and afterward I glue them to poster board and hang on the wall at the city house.
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DaveBell
Moderator
# Posted: 10 Apr 2024 13:18
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ICC, have you ever seen the back pages of Fine Woodworking magazine? The pics of that second box would get published. Very nice work. Ever seen the Japanese joinery where they use no nails?

travellerw
Member
# Posted: 10 Apr 2024 13:50
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Those are lovely. I tried woodworking and I'm just not meticulous enough. Sure, I can slap a box together to hold crap in the garage. But anything that needs to look good is not in my wheelhouse.

My latest non-cabin project is restoration of a 1966 Thunderbird (never restored a car before, its been interesting).

ICC
Member
# Posted: 10 Apr 2024 17:00
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Thank you for the kudos. I may add some other photos

Quoting: paulz
cutting board I made in high school wood shop (mandatory classes back then)

...wow! Nice to still have that. I liked shops or Industrial Arts as I think the official name was. I had auto, wood, metal, and electronics. My wife did jigsaw puzzles a lot. There are a couple of framed 1500+ piece ones on the wall here and there.

Quoting: DaveBell
...have you ever seen the back pages of Fine Woodworking magazine

Oh yeah. Many very nice projects appear in FW. I used to subscribe to the paper version. I have seen many examples of fine Japanese woodwork. Nice stuff. I do have and use Japanese saws and chisels. I really like the thin pull saw blades and their laminated steel chisels hold the sharp edge longer than US and EU chisels.


Quoting: travellerw
...restoration of a 1966 Thunderbird...

I hope it has a decent body? Remaing or buying replacement panels can eat up a lot of work and funds. I have some oldies and consider myself sooo very lucky to have access to vehicles that have never seen salt, maybe never even seen snow. Though the sun can kill some plastics very badly.

paulz
Member
# Posted: 10 Apr 2024 22:16
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Quoting: travellerw
My latest non-cabin project is restoration of a 1966 Thunderbird


My commuter in the ‘90s. Only thing unusual i remember is the steering column swung in for easy seating. 1964 model.
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WILL1E
Moderator
# Posted: 11 Apr 2024 21:56
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As a child of 1980, i have had a slight addiction to Lego's my entire life. So today at 44 i'm what they call an AFOL (Adult Fan of Lego). And now as a single man and being winter in WI, i find myself buying Lego on a weekly basis!

travellerw
Member
# Posted: 11 Apr 2024 22:15
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Quoting: ICC
I hope it has a decent body? Remaing or buying replacement panels can eat up a lot of work and funds. I have some oldies and consider myself sooo very lucky to have access to vehicles that have never seen salt, maybe never even seen snow. Though the sun can kill some plastics very badly.


For being a Canadian car its in remarkably great shape. However, I have had to order 2 replacement panels as they were complex shapes and too hard to fabricate. The other panels (floorboard on drivers side, and some spots in the trunk) I have been fabricating by hand. Really compared to the stuff around here that is nothing.

The engine was shot, so started on that. Since I had that out, I figured I would do the whole front-end and steering. Then it was brake lines, then fuel lines, then fuel tank.. Sigh its like picking a thread on a sweater, everything just unravels.

Quoting: paulz
My commuter in the ‘90s. Only thing unusual i remember is the steering column swung in for easy seating. 1964 model.
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That is pretty much my car. Even the color is the same. Maybe this will jog your memory... EVERYTHING except the wipers run off vacuum. The wipers run off the power steering pump (for real).

paulz
Member
# Posted: 12 Apr 2024 10:35 - Edited by: paulz
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Quoting: ICC
..wow! Nice to still have that. I liked shops or Industrial Arts as I think the official name was. I had auto, wood, metal, and electronics


Yes, Industrial Arts, had all those too. Metal shop had welding (imagine a bunch of kids wielding gas torches!), lathes, grinders… stuff that has lasted me a lifetime.

Another relic still hanging out at the cabin.. My first wood attempt, this table, from junior high, 7th grade. Just a slice of wood sanded to angles on two sides. Made the legs too. I should refinish it but it has a warp, maybe a water soak under weight.

How these things have lasted this long and made it through all the moves in my life is odd, but here they are..
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Aklogcabin
Member
# Posted: 12 Apr 2024 11:42
Reply 


I owned n operated a woodworking shop for over 10 years. Did 1 kitchen that was on the food channel 3 times that I know of. Executive desks, kitchen tables n such. Love the woodworking stuff. I also restore old vehicles. My daily driver is a 79 El Camino. Currently working on a 69 Ranchero. And 83 GMC Jimmy. 76 F-250 highboy. And a bunch of snogos n wheelers.
I've been busy building our retirement home this last couple of years. Lots of work for a 1 man crew but I really enjoy the work. I also enjoy the outdoors a lot, hunting trapping n fishing. Helping beautiful wife with a large garden and raising meat rabbits. Family wants to expand into chickens for eggs and friers.
Living in rural AK is beautiful and I enjoy being outdoors. Hope to get more cabin time in soon. Gotta finish the sand point well and install TnG pine boards on the lid in the upstairs. New outhouse and wheeler shed.
I really enjoy helping our grandson learn everything I do. He's 7 now so he's ready.

ICC
Member
# Posted: 12 Apr 2024 20:42 - Edited by: ICC
Reply 


We have had an intergenerational project going on for the past year. Much of the time was spent planning and we are well into the physical work. The generations include myself, my son, my son-in-law plus his 16-year-old. Ages are 78, 43, 55, 16 plus a 62-year-old Volvo PV544. The PV544 is an AZ car I bought about a dozen years ago. I wanted to swap in a GM 60-degree 3.4 liter V6, but ran into several issues that stalled me for years.

The 544 was stripped down to a shell. The interior was rough though the metal was very solid. My son-in-law has welded up a major front suspension upgrade. It sits lower and should ride a lot better than the usual method of simply using shorter springs. There are other advantages derived from the front suspension changes.

The engine is the same GM 60-degree 3.4 liter V6 that I bought years ago. It has now been rebuilt with a supercharger, to help regain the power lost to our altitude. My son has machined parts needed for the supercharger installation. A T-5, 5-speed manual transmission is used and the rear axle is now a 9" Ford with limited slip.

Custom headers, the plates are commercially available as this engine is often swapped into MG's and other small cars and boats.

My grandson is the chief electrical systems technician. At some point, after it runs and we are happy, new paint and new upholstery will be done.

Exhaust pipes will be trimmed shorter when the rear end treatment (nerf bars?) is done. We have all the glass, the seat frames, door panels. It will need a new dash, new instrumentation.
it rolls.
it rolls.
new front end sub-frame and suspension.
new front end sub-frame and suspension.
custom headers
custom headers


paulz
Member
# Posted: 13 Apr 2024 10:35
Reply 


Very nice ICC. Will make quite the sleeper. Those are neat Volvos.

I've mentioned my Chevy Blazer, still current backup unit at the cabin. About 5 years ago I rebuilt a 350 and swapped out the original 305, complete with under hood blower.
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ICC
Member
# Posted: 14 Apr 2024 12:34
Reply 


another recently completed item combines woodwork and some simple electronics. This is about 10" high. It uses an LED meant for a flashlight along with the driver (circuit board), a USB-C charger board and a lipo cell. There is also an aluminum heat sink inside the chimney tube. The main wood is called wenge, the trim strip is a stained piece of canarywood.
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ICC
Member
# Posted: 14 Apr 2024 12:37
Reply 


more images...
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