04-27-2024, 10:57 PM
Working on a Brent Comber - inspired bench for the front porch. I've always admired his work, but never had the material to work with. But after clearing a few dozen trees for a garage build and hiring a portable sawmill, I was able to come up with a chunk of Doug Fir that is 14" high x 11" deep. Not quite as big as I would like, but plenty big enough to be a challenge. The original chunk was 7' long, and the sawyer estimated weight around 280 pounds. We used his excavator to get it as close to the front porch as we could, then muscled it on a dolly and moved it the rest of the way.
I marked the dimensions I wanted - about 5' long, with 15 degree angles on the end, and went to work. Track saw was used to score as deep as I could, then a Japanese pullsaw to finish the cuts on the ends. Then marked the arcs on the top and bottom and scored again with the track saw. Chipped waste out with a chisel, flattened with a jack plane, and finished up with a Rotex sander with 40 grit. Tearout is always an issue with Doug Fir, and this was no exception, but the sander took care of most of it.
Finished up the bottom of it today, and will try to finish the top tomorrow.
I marked the dimensions I wanted - about 5' long, with 15 degree angles on the end, and went to work. Track saw was used to score as deep as I could, then a Japanese pullsaw to finish the cuts on the ends. Then marked the arcs on the top and bottom and scored again with the track saw. Chipped waste out with a chisel, flattened with a jack plane, and finished up with a Rotex sander with 40 grit. Tearout is always an issue with Doug Fir, and this was no exception, but the sander took care of most of it.
Finished up the bottom of it today, and will try to finish the top tomorrow.
True power makes no noise - Albert Schweitzer. It's obvious he was referring to hand tools