Re: Joe in New Orleans is selling everything in his shop
On 7/29/20 1:29 PM, Joe Jensen wrote:
I seems you can¡¯t really
insure for damage or if you do you can¡¯t collect
Call your? insurance agent? and ask about?? a rider? or
performance and to cover shipping and delivery.? This is normal
stuff for the industry
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Re: AD941 vs. Baileigh JP-1898-NC
Also don¡¯t forget to add 1k for?commissioning unless you like rolling the dice or at least comfortable with making your own adjustments.?
Also jumping to the 951 is like $3500 min and 3p only...?
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 7:35 PM, Bill B¨¦langer <Bllblngr@...> wrote:
? When I was considering the 941-951 my salesman told me I didn¡¯t need the 951. So for some people it might be overkill. Just sayin...
Bill Belanger?
If you need an AD941 then you might as well get the 951. 951 is alot more machine than 941.
I was in similar situation 2 years ago and I went with 951, silent cutter etc. never looked back.?
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Re: Hammer B3 electrical problem
#hammer
capacitors are cheap,? replace them.? I'd? had good luck
replacing cheap parts? as the go to fix-it method? over the years
when ever I'm in over? my head.
On 7/29/20 9:31 AM, sam via groups.io
wrote:
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Hello all? - first off I completely understand if nobody has the
time to look over this one and probably requires a fairly indepth
knowledge of how the Hammer combination machines electrics are
setup.
--
So, my Hammer B3 (single phase, 2005, teal paint) has become
poorly. Working fine up until Saturday (with one minor quirk
regarding braking). It?currently trips the breaker
instantaneously upon starting the machine. Likely significant that
this occurs in any mode switch position (on the
B3 that is shaper or table saw). The first time trying to restart
it there was a very short buzz (~0.5s) from the motor and the
breaker went, all subsequent starts there have been no buzzes, no
clicks, instant trip.
Initial thought was the table saw motor windings had worn past a
critical point due to a stall the day before (which did at the
time throw the thermal switch on the machine itself), but I have
since tried the machine in shaper mode (which of course should
swap the circuit over to the other motor) but shows the same
issue. Instant trip.
I've investigated both start and run capacitors for faults but
both appear to be as they should be (capacitance reading is bang
on, not shorted etc.), unsure if there is more to testing a
capacitor however.
There's another recent discussion on here about a C3-31 with
electrical problems related to the brake (and resolved by
replacing the brake module) but can't quite match the symptoms,
notably mine appears to trip instantly.
Is there any potential for the brake to somehow be engaged during
startup? A sticky relay etc? May be rather specific knowledge but,
would anyone be able to describe a procedure for safely
eliminating the brake as a factor?
As it is, not sure where to start with diagnosis as the above
would seem to imply the issue is not with the motor or (shared)
capacitors.
The quirk with braking mentioned above that may indicate something
to someone with more knowledge than me, is that it would: 50% of
the time work fine, 25% of the time it would engage for a shorter
period than necessary, 25% of the time it wouldn't engage at all
and spin freely.
Any further information or photos anyone may need I'm sure I can
provide.
|
Re: AD941 vs. Baileigh JP-1898-NC
When I was considering the 941-951 my salesman told me I didn¡¯t need the 951. So for some people it might be overkill. Just sayin...
Bill Belanger?
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Show quoted text
If you need an AD941 then you might as well get the 951. 951 is alot more machine than 941.
I was in similar situation 2 years ago and I went with 951, silent cutter etc. never looked back.?
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Re: Aigner Distometer up alternative?
joe said, he did that procedure before he purchased profil.
imran
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 6:23 PM, Albert Lee <timbershelf@...> wrote: ?hi Joe
Thought Profil45 has everything automated and controlled via a control panel, why would you need the fencing measuring device??
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Re: Aigner Distometer up alternative?
hi Joe
Thought Profil45 has everything automated and controlled via a control panel, why would you need the fencing measuring device??
|
Re: AD941 vs. Baileigh JP-1898-NC
If you need an AD941 then you might as well get the 951. 951 is alot more machine than 941.
I was in similar situation 2 years ago and I went with 951, silent cutter etc. never looked back.?
|
Re: Hammer B3 electrical problem
#hammer
Sorry, I forgot to mention that the capacitors must be removed from circuit if you are testing the capacitance using a multimeter as you may be measuring multiple capacitors and/or other components that also have some capacitance at the same time. ?Not necessarily so with an esr meter.
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 6:24 PM, Steve via groups.io <junkhouse1@...> wrote:
? It may still be bad capacitors. ?Just because the capacitance is good, they still need to be checked for ESR and leakage. ?Google these parameters and you will find the explanations.?
Hope this helps.
Steve On Jul 29, 2020, at 5:29 PM, Roger S <rsinden@...> wrote:
? Hi Sam
I¡¯m basing this on a looksie of the Hammer C3-31 single phase circuitry but the thing is that the run and start capacitors are shared between the motors. ?IE there is just the one set of capacitors and so it;s there I¡¯d look at first of all. ?I¡¯ve not had time to se how the brake module works on a single phase but my mney is on one or other or both of those two capacitors.
Let us know how you get on
Roger
On 29 Jul 2020, at 14:31, sam via < sam@...> wrote:
Hello all? - first off I completely understand if nobody has the time to look over this one and probably requires a fairly indepth knowledge of how the Hammer combination machines electrics are setup. -- So, my Hammer B3 (single phase, 2005, teal paint) has become poorly. Working fine up until Saturday (with one minor quirk regarding braking). It?currently trips the breaker instantaneously upon starting the machine. Likely significant that this occurs in any mode switch position (on the B3 that is shaper or table saw). The first time trying to restart it there was a very short buzz (~0.5s) from the motor and the breaker went, all subsequent starts there have been no buzzes, no clicks, instant trip.
Initial thought was the table saw motor windings had worn past a critical point due to a stall the day before (which did at the time throw the thermal switch on the machine itself), but I have since tried the machine in shaper mode (which of course should swap the circuit over to the other motor) but shows the same issue. Instant trip.
I've investigated both start and run capacitors for faults but both appear to be as they should be (capacitance reading is bang on, not shorted etc.), unsure if there is more to testing a capacitor however.
There's another recent discussion on here about a C3-31 with electrical problems related to the brake (and resolved by replacing the brake module) but can't quite match the symptoms, notably mine appears to trip instantly.
Is there any potential for the brake to somehow be engaged during startup? A sticky relay etc? May be rather specific knowledge but, would anyone be able to describe a procedure for safely eliminating the brake as a factor?
As it is, not sure where to start with diagnosis as the above would seem to imply the issue is not with the motor or (shared) capacitors.
The quirk with braking mentioned above that may indicate something to someone with more knowledge than me, is that it would: 50% of the time work fine, 25% of the time it would engage for a shorter period than necessary, 25% of the time it wouldn't engage at all and spin freely.
Any further information or photos anyone may need I'm sure I can provide.
|
Re: Hammer B3 electrical problem
#hammer
It may still be bad capacitors. ?Just because the capacitance is good, they still need to be checked for ESR and leakage. ?Google these parameters and you will find the explanations.?
Hope this helps.
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On Jul 29, 2020, at 5:29 PM, Roger S <rsinden@...> wrote:
? Hi Sam
I¡¯m basing this on a looksie of the Hammer C3-31 single phase circuitry but the thing is that the run and start capacitors are shared between the motors. ?IE there is just the one set of capacitors and so it;s there I¡¯d look at first of all. ?I¡¯ve not had time to se how the brake module works on a single phase but my mney is on one or other or both of those two capacitors.
Let us know how you get on
Roger
On 29 Jul 2020, at 14:31, sam via < sam@...> wrote:
Hello all? - first off I completely understand if nobody has the time to look over this one and probably requires a fairly indepth knowledge of how the Hammer combination machines electrics are setup. -- So, my Hammer B3 (single phase, 2005, teal paint) has become poorly. Working fine up until Saturday (with one minor quirk regarding braking). It?currently trips the breaker instantaneously upon starting the machine. Likely significant that this occurs in any mode switch position (on the B3 that is shaper or table saw). The first time trying to restart it there was a very short buzz (~0.5s) from the motor and the breaker went, all subsequent starts there have been no buzzes, no clicks, instant trip.
Initial thought was the table saw motor windings had worn past a critical point due to a stall the day before (which did at the time throw the thermal switch on the machine itself), but I have since tried the machine in shaper mode (which of course should swap the circuit over to the other motor) but shows the same issue. Instant trip.
I've investigated both start and run capacitors for faults but both appear to be as they should be (capacitance reading is bang on, not shorted etc.), unsure if there is more to testing a capacitor however.
There's another recent discussion on here about a C3-31 with electrical problems related to the brake (and resolved by replacing the brake module) but can't quite match the symptoms, notably mine appears to trip instantly.
Is there any potential for the brake to somehow be engaged during startup? A sticky relay etc? May be rather specific knowledge but, would anyone be able to describe a procedure for safely eliminating the brake as a factor?
As it is, not sure where to start with diagnosis as the above would seem to imply the issue is not with the motor or (shared) capacitors.
The quirk with braking mentioned above that may indicate something to someone with more knowledge than me, is that it would: 50% of the time work fine, 25% of the time it would engage for a shorter period than necessary, 25% of the time it wouldn't engage at all and spin freely.
Any further information or photos anyone may need I'm sure I can provide.
|
Re: The Annex workshop addition
Anthony,
I¡¯ve been using the Fireball squares for a couple of years now and love them. ? When Mac Campshure was here visiting last time, we stood over my bulkhead entrance to the basement and jawboned about a jig crane next to my garage for getting stuff in and out. ? I hadn¡¯t seen what Fireball had come up with so thanks for that idea. ? I¡¯m also getting to the point where I consult the actuarial tables before making any serious investments - the tables suggest I¡¯d need to get about $10,000 of value per year for the Haas to make economic sense. ? Ideally I would tear down the garage and put a second metal shop in it¡¯s basement with a removable floor and crane above and connect it to the basement with a tunnel. ? Actuarial tables suggest that needs to be worth about $25K per year to make sense. ? LOL
As for electric pallet jack, you might consider an electric walk-behind stacker - very handy to have. ? Here¡¯s what I have - it¡¯s a three-step mast that will clear 80¡± when down and go to 15 feet when up. ? It¡¯s a great aid for getting heavy cabinets up to a working height, moving lifts of plywood and timber, etc. ?I¡¯ve put a remote raise/lower control on a cord, so I can get into a shop-made cherry-basket and hoist myself up to work on stuff at the ceiling (like lighting, compressed air and conduit). ? Would be idea for timber frame construction work. ? With fully charged battery it will lift my Dual 51 (2,200 pounds) up onto a flat-bed like you see in the photo. ? It¡¯s for sale if you¡¯re interested:
David Best
https://www.instagram.com/davidpbest/ Good luck with your shop build. ?Let me know if I can help in any way. ? My first house build was a timber frame in New Hampshire - love those barn-like structures.
David Best
https://www.instagram.com/davidpbest/
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 8:09 AM, Anthony Quesada < tonymiga2@...> wrote:
Brian- You are spot on in terms of heavy tooling.? I recently purchased an old mill and lathe, an industrial grinder and a sander and getting those tools into a storage was a taxing day.? Roughly 14,000 pounds of metal! ? Thank you for the suggestions on placement.? That is the way I am leaning, but I appreciate your feedback as you are far more experienced with these materials than I am. My limited experience of mixing metal and wood in the same area has really made me want unique spaces for the different tasks.? I know it can be done when I see the work coming out of your and other fabricators shops, but thank you for the reminder to keep them separate if possible. ? ?
David Best- You present some great insight.? Since this is a new adventure for me, I can¡¯t predict all the ways I will use the space, but knowing myself I am sure I will bite off more than I can chew.? At my first job we built staircases and gates, I enjoyed the process, but think I am more interested in smaller projects that I can take on without outside help and all the infrastructure we needed to get those jobs done.? If you haven't already seen it, Fireball Tools made a pretty impressive home shop crane.??Also there squares are amazing....I use their aluminum squares for wood and metal all the time. ? ?? ?
Door access is such a good point! This design fortunately has double doors entering both the first and second floor spaces, so I hope to not struggle here.? Having watched you successfully set up an amazing shop in a basement, it can clearly be done, unfortunately I lack both your creativity and intelligence. ? I imagine it must be a pain, but I selfishly really enjoy watching your ingenuity when you bring in a new tool. ? ?
Spraying- I haven¡¯t figured this part out yet and it is keeping me up at night haha. PS- I would love to see what you could get into with a Haas! ?
David Kumm Electric pallet Jack- I am not familiar with these, but assumed they were only beneficial in a large warehouse.? Where do you find these most helpful over say a traditional pallet jack?? I hope you didn¡¯t just add another expensive thing to my wish list haha ? I would love to get a fork lift and have a search saved on craigslist.? Waiting for a? good deal to come by. ?
Bill Thank you for the suggestion and complement!?
?
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Re: The Annex workshop addition
If you need a lathe for your new shop I have a like new Grizzly G0694. Since you¡¯re in Maine too it should be an easy delivery...
Bill Belanger?
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On Wed, Jul 29, 2020 at 4:45 PM Anthony Quesada < tonymiga2@...> wrote: Thanks Brian,
Great tip, i hadn¡¯t thought of a Telehandler but that could be just the tool when move in day comes.? When I moved the lathe and mill into storage the pallet jack sank into the pavement over an inch. It was a hot day by Maine standards, but it gave me a new appreciation for heavy tools. ? On Jul 29, 2020, at 16:06, Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
?You are going to want to be able to forklift all that machinery into the shop without sinking a forklift into gravel or dealing with uneven ground. So whichever level you decide, make sure you have good access. You can always rent a Telehandler too, for rougher surfaces and being able to extend the boom right into the shop. Once on the concrete you can use machinery skates, pallet jacks or pipe roll into place.
On Jul 29, 2020, at 8:09 AM, Anthony Quesada < tonymiga2@...> wrote:
Brian- You are spot on in terms of heavy tooling.? I recently purchased an old mill and lathe, an industrial grinder and a sander and getting those tools into a storage was a taxing day.? Roughly 14,000 pounds of metal! ? Thank you for the suggestions on placement.? That is the way I am leaning, but I appreciate your feedback as you are far more experienced with these materials than I am. My limited experience of mixing metal and wood in the same area has really made me want unique spaces for the different tasks.? I know it can be done when I see the work coming out of your and other fabricators shops, but thank you for the reminder to keep them separate if possible. ? ?
David Best- You present some great insight.? Since this is a new adventure for me, I can¡¯t predict all the ways I will use the space, but knowing myself I am sure I will bite off more than I can chew.? At my first job we built staircases and gates, I enjoyed the process, but think I am more interested in smaller projects that I can take on without outside help and all the infrastructure we needed to get those jobs done.? If you haven't already seen it, Fireball Tools made a pretty impressive home shop crane.??Also there squares are amazing....I use their aluminum squares for wood and metal all the time. ? ?? ?
Door access is such a good point! This design fortunately has double doors entering both the first and second floor spaces, so I hope to not struggle here.? Having watched you successfully set up an amazing shop in a basement, it can clearly be done, unfortunately I lack both your creativity and intelligence. ? I imagine it must be a pain, but I selfishly really enjoy watching your ingenuity when you bring in a new tool. ? ?
Spraying- I haven¡¯t figured this part out yet and it is keeping me up at night haha. PS- I would love to see what you could get into with a Haas! ?
David Kumm Electric pallet Jack- I am not familiar with these, but assumed they were only beneficial in a large warehouse.? Where do you find these most helpful over say a traditional pallet jack?? I hope you didn¡¯t just add another expensive thing to my wish list haha ? I would love to get a fork lift and have a search saved on craigslist.? Waiting for a? good deal to come by. ?
Bill Thank you for the suggestion and complement!?
?
|
Re: Hammer B3 electrical problem
#hammer
Hi Sam
I¡¯m basing this on a looksie of the Hammer C3-31 single phase circuitry but the thing is that the run and start capacitors are shared between the motors. ?IE there is just the one set of capacitors and so it;s there I¡¯d look at first of all. ?I¡¯ve not had time to se how the brake module works on a single phase but my mney is on one or other or both of those two capacitors.
Let us know how you get on
Roger
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On 29 Jul 2020, at 14:31, sam via < sam@...> wrote:
Hello all? - first off I completely understand if nobody has the time to look over this one and probably requires a fairly indepth knowledge of how the Hammer combination machines electrics are setup. -- So, my Hammer B3 (single phase, 2005, teal paint) has become poorly. Working fine up until Saturday (with one minor quirk regarding braking). It?currently trips the breaker instantaneously upon starting the machine. Likely significant that this occurs in any mode switch position (on the B3 that is shaper or table saw). The first time trying to restart it there was a very short buzz (~0.5s) from the motor and the breaker went, all subsequent starts there have been no buzzes, no clicks, instant trip.
Initial thought was the table saw motor windings had worn past a critical point due to a stall the day before (which did at the time throw the thermal switch on the machine itself), but I have since tried the machine in shaper mode (which of course should swap the circuit over to the other motor) but shows the same issue. Instant trip.
I've investigated both start and run capacitors for faults but both appear to be as they should be (capacitance reading is bang on, not shorted etc.), unsure if there is more to testing a capacitor however.
There's another recent discussion on here about a C3-31 with electrical problems related to the brake (and resolved by replacing the brake module) but can't quite match the symptoms, notably mine appears to trip instantly.
Is there any potential for the brake to somehow be engaged during startup? A sticky relay etc? May be rather specific knowledge but, would anyone be able to describe a procedure for safely eliminating the brake as a factor?
As it is, not sure where to start with diagnosis as the above would seem to imply the issue is not with the motor or (shared) capacitors.
The quirk with braking mentioned above that may indicate something to someone with more knowledge than me, is that it would: 50% of the time work fine, 25% of the time it would engage for a shorter period than necessary, 25% of the time it wouldn't engage at all and spin freely.
Any further information or photos anyone may need I'm sure I can provide.
|
Re: Massaranduba headboard and footboard.
They are very similar. Jatoba is shown on the left, massaranduba is in the right
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 2:04 PM, jmkserv@... wrote:
? ??
On Wed, Jul 29, 2020 at 4:07 PM Brian Lamb < blamb11@...> wrote: Silly me¡ the wood is in the topic, never heard of it, but the color kind of reminded me of Jatoba.
On Jul 29, 2020, at 12:57 PM, Brian Lamb < blamb11@...> wrote:
Looks fantastic! Do you know what the wood is? Ipe? Jatoba?
On Jul 29, 2020, at 12:37 PM, marty shultz < azmartys@...> wrote:
Just finished the bed for the cabin.? I made it out of recycled wood from our deck.? The square pegs are fake.? I tried to mortise holes in the face grain with my mortising machine and it wouldn't even break the surface because the wood is so hard.??
I used Deftoil for the finish and they're sitting outside to get rid of the smell.?
The second picture shows what the reclaimed wood looked liked before I started.? I'll be making nightstands next.
Cheers,
<IMG_0613.jpg><IMG_0557_1_.jpg>?
--
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Re: The Annex workshop addition
An electric jack won't go more than a few inches in hard gravel so don't even try to take it off concrete.? I spent an hour making that mistake last week.? Tried to save 5 minutes.? No cure for dumb.? Dave
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Thanks Brian,
Great tip, i hadn¡¯t thought of a Telehandler but that could be just the tool when move in day comes. ?When I moved the lathe and mill into storage the pallet jack sank into the pavement over an inch. It was a hot day by Maine standards, but it gave me
a new appreciation for heavy tools. ?
On Jul 29, 2020, at 16:06, Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
?You are going to want to be able to forklift all that machinery into the shop without sinking a forklift into gravel or dealing with uneven ground. So whichever level you decide, make sure you have good access. You can always rent a Telehandler
too, for rougher surfaces and being able to extend the boom right into the shop. Once on the concrete you can use machinery skates, pallet jacks or pipe roll into place.
On Jul 29, 2020, at 8:09 AM, Anthony Quesada < tonymiga2@...> wrote:
Brian- You are spot on in terms of heavy tooling.? I recently purchased an old mill and lathe, an industrial grinder and a sander and getting those tools into a storage was a taxing day.? Roughly 14,000 pounds of metal!
?
Thank you for the suggestions on placement.? That is the way I am leaning, but I appreciate your feedback as you are far more experienced with these materials than I am.
My limited experience of mixing metal and wood in the same area has really made me want unique spaces for the different tasks.?
I know it can be done when I see the work coming out of your and other fabricators shops, but thank you for the reminder to keep them separate if possible.
?
?
David Best- You present some great insight.? Since this is a new adventure for me, I can¡¯t predict all the ways I will use the space, but knowing myself I am sure I will bite off more than I can chew.? At my first job we
built staircases and gates, I enjoyed the process, but think I am more interested in smaller projects that I can take on without outside help and all the infrastructure we needed to get those jobs done.? If you haven't already seen it, Fireball Tools made
a pretty impressive home shop crane.??Also
there squares are amazing....I use their aluminum squares for wood and metal all the time. ? ??
?
Door access is such a good point! This design fortunately has double doors entering both the first and second floor spaces, so I hope to not struggle here.? Having watched you successfully set up an amazing shop in a basement,
it can clearly be done, unfortunately I lack both your creativity and intelligence. ? I imagine it must be a pain, but I selfishly really enjoy watching your ingenuity when you bring in a new tool. ?
?
Spraying- I haven¡¯t figured this part out yet and it is keeping me up at night haha.
PS- I would love to see what you could get into with a Haas!
?
David Kumm
Electric pallet Jack- I am not familiar with these, but assumed they were only beneficial in a large warehouse.? Where do you find these most helpful over say a traditional pallet jack?? I hope you didn¡¯t just add another
expensive thing to my wish list haha ?
I would love to get a fork lift and have a search saved on craigslist.? Waiting for a? good deal to come by.
?
Bill
Thank you for the suggestion and complement!?
?
|
Re: Massaranduba headboard and footboard.
It¡¯s most like Ipe. In fact, if I put an Ipe board in ?a field of massaranduba you wouldn¡¯t be able to pick the ipe.
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 1:07 PM, Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
? Silly me¡ the wood is in the topic, never heard of it, but the color kind of reminded me of Jatoba.
On Jul 29, 2020, at 12:57 PM, Brian Lamb < blamb11@...> wrote:
Looks fantastic! Do you know what the wood is? Ipe? Jatoba?
On Jul 29, 2020, at 12:37 PM, marty shultz < azmartys@...> wrote:
Just finished the bed for the cabin.? I made it out of recycled wood from our deck.? The square pegs are fake.? I tried to mortise holes in the face grain with my mortising machine and it wouldn't even break the surface because the wood is so hard.??
I used Deftoil for the finish and they're sitting outside to get rid of the smell.?
The second picture shows what the reclaimed wood looked liked before I started.? I'll be making nightstands next.
Cheers,
<IMG_0613.jpg><IMG_0557_1_.jpg>?
|
Re: Massaranduba headboard and footboard.
A little of both. I saw a tree design in a chair and modified it to a bed.?
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 12:55 PM, imranindiana via groups.io <imranindiana@...> wrote:
? Marty,
really love it. is it original, inspired or a duplication of a design?
imran On Jul 29, 2020, at 2:37 PM, marty shultz <azmartys@...> wrote:
?Just finished the bed for the cabin.? I made it out of recycled wood from our deck.? The square pegs are fake.? I tried to mortise holes in the face grain with my mortising machine and it wouldn't even break the surface because the wood is so hard.?? I used Deftoil for the finish and they're sitting outside to get rid of the smell.? The second picture shows what the reclaimed wood looked liked before I started.? I'll be making nightstands next. Cheers, <IMG_0613.jpg> <IMG_0557_1_.jpg> ?
|
Re: Massaranduba headboard and footboard.
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On Wed, Jul 29, 2020 at 4:07 PM Brian Lamb < blamb11@...> wrote: Silly me¡ the wood is in the topic, never heard of it, but the color kind of reminded me of Jatoba.
On Jul 29, 2020, at 12:57 PM, Brian Lamb < blamb11@...> wrote:
Looks fantastic! Do you know what the wood is? Ipe? Jatoba?
On Jul 29, 2020, at 12:37 PM, marty shultz < azmartys@...> wrote:
Just finished the bed for the cabin.? I made it out of recycled wood from our deck.? The square pegs are fake.? I tried to mortise holes in the face grain with my mortising machine and it wouldn't even break the surface because the wood is so hard.??
I used Deftoil for the finish and they're sitting outside to get rid of the smell.?
The second picture shows what the reclaimed wood looked liked before I started.? I'll be making nightstands next.
Cheers,
<IMG_0613.jpg><IMG_0557_1_.jpg>?
|
Re: The Annex workshop addition
All the machinery movers here carry sheets of 1/4¡± steel to lay down. We had to cut out the asphalt in front of our machine shop door and poor a concrete pad about 20 foot square as the forklift kept breaking thru the asphalt close to the foundation where it wasn¡¯t compacted hard enough. You don¡¯t want 5000 pound teeter-tottering around in the air...
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 1:45 PM, Anthony Quesada < tonymiga2@...> wrote:
Thanks Brian,
Great tip, i hadn¡¯t thought of a Telehandler but that could be just the tool when move in day comes. ?When I moved the lathe and mill into storage the pallet jack sank into the pavement over an inch. It was a hot day by Maine standards, but it gave me a new appreciation for heavy tools. ? On Jul 29, 2020, at 16:06, Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
? You are going to want to be able to forklift all that machinery into the shop without sinking a forklift into gravel or dealing with uneven ground. So whichever level you decide, make sure you have good access. You can always rent a Telehandler too, for rougher surfaces and being able to extend the boom right into the shop. Once on the concrete you can use machinery skates, pallet jacks or pipe roll into place.
On Jul 29, 2020, at 8:09 AM, Anthony Quesada < tonymiga2@...> wrote:
Brian- You are spot on in terms of heavy tooling.? I recently purchased an old mill and lathe, an industrial grinder and a sander and getting those tools into a storage was a taxing day.? Roughly 14,000 pounds of metal! ? Thank you for the suggestions on placement.? That is the way I am leaning, but I appreciate your feedback as you are far more experienced with these materials than I am. My limited experience of mixing metal and wood in the same area has really made me want unique spaces for the different tasks.? I know it can be done when I see the work coming out of your and other fabricators shops, but thank you for the reminder to keep them separate if possible. ? ?
David Best- You present some great insight.? Since this is a new adventure for me, I can¡¯t predict all the ways I will use the space, but knowing myself I am sure I will bite off more than I can chew.? At my first job we built staircases and gates, I enjoyed the process, but think I am more interested in smaller projects that I can take on without outside help and all the infrastructure we needed to get those jobs done.? If you haven't already seen it, Fireball Tools made a pretty impressive home shop crane.??Also there squares are amazing....I use their aluminum squares for wood and metal all the time. ? ?? ?
Door access is such a good point! This design fortunately has double doors entering both the first and second floor spaces, so I hope to not struggle here.? Having watched you successfully set up an amazing shop in a basement, it can clearly be done, unfortunately I lack both your creativity and intelligence. ? I imagine it must be a pain, but I selfishly really enjoy watching your ingenuity when you bring in a new tool. ? ?
Spraying- I haven¡¯t figured this part out yet and it is keeping me up at night haha. PS- I would love to see what you could get into with a Haas! ?
David Kumm Electric pallet Jack- I am not familiar with these, but assumed they were only beneficial in a large warehouse.? Where do you find these most helpful over say a traditional pallet jack?? I hope you didn¡¯t just add another expensive thing to my wish list haha ? I would love to get a fork lift and have a search saved on craigslist.? Waiting for a? good deal to come by. ?
Bill Thank you for the suggestion and complement!?
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Re: The Annex workshop addition
Thanks Brian,
Great tip, i hadn¡¯t thought of a Telehandler but that could be just the tool when move in day comes. ?When I moved the lathe and mill into storage the pallet jack sank into the pavement over an inch. It was a hot day by Maine standards, but it gave me a new appreciation for heavy tools. ?
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On Jul 29, 2020, at 16:06, Brian Lamb <blamb11@...> wrote:
? You are going to want to be able to forklift all that machinery into the shop without sinking a forklift into gravel or dealing with uneven ground. So whichever level you decide, make sure you have good access. You can always rent a Telehandler too, for rougher surfaces and being able to extend the boom right into the shop. Once on the concrete you can use machinery skates, pallet jacks or pipe roll into place.
On Jul 29, 2020, at 8:09 AM, Anthony Quesada < tonymiga2@...> wrote:
Brian- You are spot on in terms of heavy tooling.? I recently purchased an old mill and lathe, an industrial grinder and a sander and getting those tools into a storage was a taxing day.? Roughly 14,000 pounds of metal! ? Thank you for the suggestions on placement.? That is the way I am leaning, but I appreciate your feedback as you are far more experienced with these materials than I am. My limited experience of mixing metal and wood in the same area has really made me want unique spaces for the different tasks.? I know it can be done when I see the work coming out of your and other fabricators shops, but thank you for the reminder to keep them separate if possible. ? ?
David Best- You present some great insight.? Since this is a new adventure for me, I can¡¯t predict all the ways I will use the space, but knowing myself I am sure I will bite off more than I can chew.? At my first job we built staircases and gates, I enjoyed the process, but think I am more interested in smaller projects that I can take on without outside help and all the infrastructure we needed to get those jobs done.? If you haven't already seen it, Fireball Tools made a pretty impressive home shop crane.??Also there squares are amazing....I use their aluminum squares for wood and metal all the time. ? ?? ?
Door access is such a good point! This design fortunately has double doors entering both the first and second floor spaces, so I hope to not struggle here.? Having watched you successfully set up an amazing shop in a basement, it can clearly be done, unfortunately I lack both your creativity and intelligence. ? I imagine it must be a pain, but I selfishly really enjoy watching your ingenuity when you bring in a new tool. ? ?
Spraying- I haven¡¯t figured this part out yet and it is keeping me up at night haha. PS- I would love to see what you could get into with a Haas! ?
David Kumm Electric pallet Jack- I am not familiar with these, but assumed they were only beneficial in a large warehouse.? Where do you find these most helpful over say a traditional pallet jack?? I hope you didn¡¯t just add another expensive thing to my wish list haha ? I would love to get a fork lift and have a search saved on craigslist.? Waiting for a? good deal to come by. ?
Bill Thank you for the suggestion and complement!?
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Cliff,
That is my back plan at last case scenario. ?I had a container down in the Bay Area on the coast that I stored my tools in before moving to the shop and did that and it worked well. I Tried to use the unit in my new shop untill? i got a controlled environment but it would just freeze up.
?Glen
Alpine Moulding and Millwork Inc.
Mail: ?? P.O. Box 257 ?????????? Avery, CA. 95224 Shop: 441 Pennsylvania Gulch Road ????????? Murphys, CA. 95247
????????? 650-678-3137 LIC # 707507
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On Tue, Jul 28, 2020 at 4:50 PM Cliff Rohrabacher, Esq. < rohrabacher@...> wrote:
Put a dehumidifier in it
On 7/28/20 12:10 AM, Glen Christensen
wrote:
I was wondering if anyone stores material in shipping containers.
I was recently approved to be a distributor for moulding and
hardwoods. I am moving forward with the building addition to
accommodate that but that is a lot of nice footage to store
product that i would like to keep for shop space . So in my
thinking shipping containers would let me keep my new shop space.
I know there are condensation problems with containers and trying
to figure how to deal with that. I think the issue is manly MDFU
as much as I hate it, it is the trend here, The other line I got
was Bodyguard which will be more stable than MDF. Containers are
cheap to buy and I have the room, but I have to eliminate the
condensation issue. Any Thoughts?
Thank you as always,
Glen
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