05-26-2018, 05:03 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-26-2018, 05:05 PM by Bibliophile 13.)
I like a good joiner's mallet. Every year, I cut a few 3"X3" billets out of a pecan log and set them up in my attic to dry out over the summer. It's pretty kiln-like up there, so after a year or so in the attic, the billets are dry enough to be made into mallet heads. Here are the finished mallets, which I just completed this week:
Pecan makes a fantastic mallet. It's hard, fairly heavy, and quite resistant to splitting when dry. Plus, the wood always has a little character once you put some oil on it.
I took a couple process pictures along the way. I have a full blog entry here if you want to know how I make them step-by-step.
Once I cut into this pecan billet, however, I encountered a surprise. There was a 3/8" diameter hole running almost the full length of the wood, with the grain. Not sure whether it was old insect damage or what, but my heart sank when I saw that. I had two realistic options: cut the billet down in width and make mallets with smaller heads, or try to fill in the hole somehow.
I decided to do a little of both.
It's not hard to fill holes, of course. Normally you just enlarge them with a drill bit, cut a plug or dowel the right size, and glue it in. My problem was that these holes are on the business-end of a mallet. Anything I use to fill it is going to take a lot of abuse. I didn't have any pecan dowels, nor did I have any way to accurately cut a dowel or plug. After dithering back and forth, I decided to go ahead and enlarge the hole with a 1/2" drill bit. Then I glued an oak dowel down into the middle of the hole, leaving about 1" on each end. Then I squared up each hole with a chisel, cut some 1/2" plugs from some pecan scrap, and glued in the plugs. They look a little funny, but they should hold up in use.
Making the mallets themselves is pretty straightforward. I drill out as much of the hole in the head as I can, normally on the drill press using a Forsner bit.
Then I square it up carefully with a chisel. It can be slow going, but taking small bites is the key. And yes, it really helps to have a mallet in order to make a mallet.
The handle is very gently tapered toward the end, and once the hole is squared up into a matching tapered mortise, it is inserted from the top. With use, the handle wedges tighter and tighter into the mortise until it's virtually un-removable.
But before assembling, I add some additional weight to the heads.
I soak the heads in mineral oil thinned with mineral spirits. They soak up quite a bit of oil, and that adds some good heft to the heads. One of the big mallets ends up being a healthy 16 oz. at least.
[url=https://flic.kr/p/26so31U][/url]
Each mallet is pretty comfortable to hold. And yes, they're all spoken for. I'm giving the big ones away to some woodworkers I know who are building up their hand tools arsenals and need a little encouragement.
And as for the little one, well, one of my kids claimed it as soon as she saw it. But I really like the size, so next year I might make a few more in that size and keep one for myself.
Pecan makes a fantastic mallet. It's hard, fairly heavy, and quite resistant to splitting when dry. Plus, the wood always has a little character once you put some oil on it.
I took a couple process pictures along the way. I have a full blog entry here if you want to know how I make them step-by-step.
Once I cut into this pecan billet, however, I encountered a surprise. There was a 3/8" diameter hole running almost the full length of the wood, with the grain. Not sure whether it was old insect damage or what, but my heart sank when I saw that. I had two realistic options: cut the billet down in width and make mallets with smaller heads, or try to fill in the hole somehow.
I decided to do a little of both.
It's not hard to fill holes, of course. Normally you just enlarge them with a drill bit, cut a plug or dowel the right size, and glue it in. My problem was that these holes are on the business-end of a mallet. Anything I use to fill it is going to take a lot of abuse. I didn't have any pecan dowels, nor did I have any way to accurately cut a dowel or plug. After dithering back and forth, I decided to go ahead and enlarge the hole with a 1/2" drill bit. Then I glued an oak dowel down into the middle of the hole, leaving about 1" on each end. Then I squared up each hole with a chisel, cut some 1/2" plugs from some pecan scrap, and glued in the plugs. They look a little funny, but they should hold up in use.
Making the mallets themselves is pretty straightforward. I drill out as much of the hole in the head as I can, normally on the drill press using a Forsner bit.
Then I square it up carefully with a chisel. It can be slow going, but taking small bites is the key. And yes, it really helps to have a mallet in order to make a mallet.
The handle is very gently tapered toward the end, and once the hole is squared up into a matching tapered mortise, it is inserted from the top. With use, the handle wedges tighter and tighter into the mortise until it's virtually un-removable.
But before assembling, I add some additional weight to the heads.
I soak the heads in mineral oil thinned with mineral spirits. They soak up quite a bit of oil, and that adds some good heft to the heads. One of the big mallets ends up being a healthy 16 oz. at least.
[url=https://flic.kr/p/26so31U][/url]
Each mallet is pretty comfortable to hold. And yes, they're all spoken for. I'm giving the big ones away to some woodworkers I know who are building up their hand tools arsenals and need a little encouragement.
And as for the little one, well, one of my kids claimed it as soon as she saw it. But I really like the size, so next year I might make a few more in that size and keep one for myself.
Steve S.
------------------------------------------------------
Tradition cannot be inherited, and if you want it you must obtain it by great labour.
- T. S. Eliot
Tutorials and Build-Alongs at The Literary Workshop
------------------------------------------------------
Tradition cannot be inherited, and if you want it you must obtain it by great labour.
- T. S. Eliot
Tutorials and Build-Alongs at The Literary Workshop