I'm building this bar with a curved front. It is 6' wide. I'm planning a frame and panel front using 3/4" thick fingerjointed teak flooring (same stuff you see on the shelves). Even if it weren't fingerjointed, I'm at a loss as how to make the two curved rails without a bandsaw (or tablesaw). It's not a very sharp curve, but I don't think the fingerjoints would survive cold bending. Maybe fashion some kind of steam box but then I'm concerned the glue in the fingerjoints could fail. I'm also considering kerf cutting to make the bend, but you'll see the kerfs. Maybe they can be hidden with thin molding?
I guess I could also try to hand resaw them and then glue them back together. The frame will just be 2 1/4" wide. I mean, that's how it used to be done, but there's got to be another way.
For cutting tools, I have a dual sided Japanese saw (rip and crosscut), cordless circular saw with 6 1/2" blade and Kreg edge guide, jigsaw, tracksaw with 4' track, and reciprocating saw. The teak isn't extremely expensive (80cents/lf) so even if I butcher it, I can smooth it with handplane.
[attachment=33566]
I guess I could also try to hand resaw them and then glue them back together. The frame will just be 2 1/4" wide. I mean, that's how it used to be done, but there's got to be another way.
For cutting tools, I have a dual sided Japanese saw (rip and crosscut), cordless circular saw with 6 1/2" blade and Kreg edge guide, jigsaw, tracksaw with 4' track, and reciprocating saw. The teak isn't extremely expensive (80cents/lf) so even if I butcher it, I can smooth it with handplane.
[attachment=33566]