(06-20-2018, 08:10 AM)Woodshop Wrote: Very cool idea and nicely made
where did you get the hardware?
Don
Two stories about the hardware store -
I would be working in the Shop and someone would knock on the door. Anybody that has been to the Shop knows you don't need to knock on the door. Therefore it must be someone that has never visited me before.
Of course, I tell them to come in. I was right. I don't know them.
When I ask what I can do for them, they place something on the workbench and say "Jack sent me here. He did not have one of these and thought you might." Usually I did have one - or would make one for them. This happened two or three times per year.
Story Number two -
I would go to the hardware store looking for "something". The new gals would always ask me what they could get for me. I would tell them I would know it when I saw it. I was on the hunt for a particular "thing" to use on whatever it was I was building. Who knows where I might find it - electrical, hardware, household, tools? It could be anywhere. They would follow me around trying to help, but honestly they really did not know what I needed either.
When I finished the project, I would take it back to the store and show them. That was the time they could look at it and identify the "thing" I was looking for. It might be a piece of a household drinking glass, a plumbing fitting (after modification on my metal lathe), or an electrical doo-dad that wasn't used on anything with electricity.
Memories enough to last me a lifetime. Thanks, Jack.
Anyway, to answer your question.
The levers for the keys are made from 1/8" x 3/8" brass tube. I cut them at the appropriate miter angle and soldered them together. Just to make things a little more solid, I filled them with epoxy.
The buttons for the levers are miniature 3/8" brass drawer knobs I had in "inventory". I am always buying stuff to have in "inventory".
The brass finials at the top were found in the electrical department - lamp parts.
The brass plates for the number display were cut from 3/4" x 1/8" sheet stock. Of course, the short ones on the left are just sized differently. You have to remember there was no need for the cash register to actually work so I was able to save some time there.
I cut the glass front and back in the number display from the last piece of glass I will ever buy from Jack.
The numbers on the brass plates in the number display are just adhesive vinyl numbers.
The small knob to hold the spring loaded drawer closed is a 3/16" brass screw with a brass knurled nut at the top and the treads covered with a brass tube epoxied to the screw.
The logo plate is a reduced copy from one of their ads and placed under a piece of plexiglass I had sitting around the Shop. (Yea, I know. Who keeps tiny pieces of plexiglass sitting around the Shop? Well . . . I do.)
The "marble" shelf in front of the buttons is actually a small piece of solid surface counter top I had sitting around the Shop. (See the comment about plexiglass above.)
Oh, I had the oak sitting on the lumber rack.
Know Guns. Know Security. Know Freedom - - - No Guns. No Security. No Freedom
Guns are supposed to be dangerous. If yours is not dangerous you need to take it to a gunsmith and have it repaired.