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Posted

I started work on my 2nd shepherd's hut today. I have some rings of an old set of cambridge rolls which I will use for the wheels . They are too big to fit in my lathe so l started milling off the ridge using a rotary table on the mill.

 

 

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The first hut was finished some time ago but the ground is too wet to move it so I think I will wait till the spring before putting it on Ebay.

 

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John

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Posted

Love this, but why bother with the effort of using your machinery to make sawdust? All the huts I have ever seen sit in a field looking inviting and only move a maximum of one hedge in a year.....

codlasher

Posted

Very slow on the mill ,but even with the gap removed it will not fit on the lathe.

I have a Student and a Bantam .

No pictures of the inside but i will try and take some. It has a small shop made woodburner with oven to cook a potato in !

If it is on wheels there is now problem with the planners if i want to leave it in the woods.

Posted

If it is on wheels there is now problem with the planners if i want to leave it in the woods.

 

Really? I'd have thought it would be the opposite, ie if its on wheels its mobile and not a fixed dwelling

Posted (edited)
Really? I'd have thought it would be the opposite, ie if its on wheels its mobile and not a fixed dwelling

 

Think John meant "If it is on wheels there is no problem with the planners if i want to leave it in the woods."

Edited by Mat
Posted
Really? I'd have thought it would be the opposite, ie if its on wheels its mobile and not a fixed dwelling

 

The wheels are not the determining factor it's how it can ultimately be moved, how many sections it can be moved in and a few other details.

 

Smallwoods article.pdf

Smallwoods article.pdf

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