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Woodworks

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Everything posted by Woodworks

  1. Sue Gray is not taking this laying down 😂 https://drive.google.com/file/d/1TQdMpiSsU7OzUzhR1qTJnCUS8DGz34T1/view DRIVE.GOOGLE.COM
  2. Always used tung oil myself
  3. Yes easy. I only have the the Remet 120 on a wee 55hp compact tractor. Our tractor stalling is our limiting factor. This is it in action with nothing staged
  4. Only used a chainsaw type but the cost of something with the same capacity with circular saw was lot higher. Sure there is some maintenance to do but it's easy and leaves it cutting perfectly again. Only demo I saw of a Posch it kept jamming on twisty wood that was far straighter than what I get. No idea if this was operator error or not though
  5. I have had a TR70 and a Remet 120 from you. Both good machines IME.
  6. 9 Days! Well yes technically I could but the effort and fuel required would need to charge a fortune for the end product. I guess when you do it in a large kiln/retort the labour is less of an issue but even so 9 days! Will watch the videos when I get a moment. Thanks
  7. Looked like it was cutting pretty well in both. Bigger chips in the second video as it was much smaller diameter wood would be my take
  8. Often wonder how they make binchotan. Sadly this gives few clues but a lovely if rather sad video Incredible how hard yet sturdy the charcoal is and sounds like steel when knocked together.
  9. Playing devils advocate for a moment. I get they can hit us with targeted advertising but thats probably better than irrelevant stuff popping up on ones timeline. They know that I went to the shops and bought some Marmite then had drinks with Derek. How can this all be used against us?
  10. Easily. The year before last due to covid messing things up my softwood didn't get felled and delivered until September. Still had it dry and for sale at the back end of the winter. That was douglas fir
  11. You are probably going need to get knife sharpening jig then. I dont think keeping the angle right is any easier on a water stone just different. Looking at some of the beautiful knives linked in this thread I might have room in draw for just one more 😃
  12. I have have fancy water stones in the workshop and even a wet stone grinder but never use them on knives. As I said regular use of a diamond steel keeps them sharp and quick to use. I guess if you want the very best edge and are prepared to use them every use a 6000/8000 grit water stone is good but the hassle! There seems to be lot of snake oil salesmen for kitchen knives saying you have to have this or that. You are just removing metal to leave the thinest edge possible. Harder steels need a harder sharpening medium hence ceramic, diamonds and water stones (these are actually soft but wear fast to expose fresh sharp grit)
  13. Good old carbon steel takes a far better edge and is easy to sharpen. You never see chisels and saws made of SS for good reason
  14. Sharpening is the key Mark. For me all I use is diamond steel. It removes enough when used often to never need to regrind the knives A cheap knife well sharpened is better than exotica left to go blunt. Think our knives are knock off Global but take an OK edge. Dont put them through the dishwasher!
  15. Beech and oak will not be the best as they are very heavy timbers. I still have yet to weigh a cube of fresh logs that was more than 500kg
  16. It is a staggering amount of money but I think that is the budget put aside for it in total not what has been spent so far. Worth bearing in mind that there have been over 400 million tests to date. If the money ran out now thats £92.50 per test and any subsequent tracing. I am no fan of this dubious government but maybe this is not as awful as it first looks This is the most up to date spending I can see NHS Test and Trace cost £13.5 billion in its first year - Full Fact FULLFACT.ORG £37 billion is its two year budget, but it only spent £13.5 billion in its first year, which is less than expected.
  17. With the way the costs of electricity are going you will probably save a few bob 😃
  18. First picture of the tough plastic pallets I have used and the second is of the ones that have become brittle with UV
  19. IBC have bases that lift the logs off the floor anyway. No need for a pallet under them. Make hats for the IBCs from the plastic liner Edit. If you do use plastic pallets they are variable in quality. I have some which we built movable raised beds on that have been bullet proof but others seems to suffer with UV and become brittle.
  20. Not used elm much but presuming its much like other timbers I would sand with the grain working through the grades to 240grit. Wipe/brush off all excess dust. Then an oil finish. My preference is Liberon finishing oil but other swear by Osmo. IME Osmo leaves a paler less deep colour but is incredibly easy to apply
  21. Butterly joint can be very attractive and I have used them on a few jobs over the years. Not got any pictures of them on a top but here are some around the edge of this set of tables. They are immensely strong
  22. If you are going to joining board often get a biscuit jointer. Brilliant piece of kit and you dont need to be so precise about positioning as you do with dowels. You can also get cutter to use in a router to do biscuit joints. For a good join you do need the faces of the two boards to meet up near perfectly. PVA glues dont gap fill but are cheap and easy to use PU (Gorrila) glues do gap fill but will not be strong if there are gaps. Epoxy will gap fill with strength but are costly If you have a circular saw set up a straightedge clamped down the length of the boards. Make sure the blade is set perfectly square to base of the saw and blade is sharp. Do a couple of practice passes with blade retracted so you know you can run the saw down the length of the board without rocking ie keeping the saw base perfectly flush with the board throughout the cut. With a bit of luck this should give you a pretty clean square edge. In the ideal world you would run a plane down it to clean off the saw marks for a near invisible joint. Be warned though a blunt plane not set up right might make more of a mess than the sawn edges.
  23. That looks brilliant. Would have loved one of those as a kid..........still would 😆
  24. Do you know where you can get cbn wheels in the custom shapes needed for chain Sharpening? Try these guys. They seem happy to make anything to order having chatted to them through their ebay shop https://www.baltic-abrasives.com/en/ https://www.ebay.co.uk/str/balticabrasivetechnologies
  25. Woodworks

    Santa .

    You know he has run in to a spot of bother?

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