Band saw cabinet build

I’m going to try to document this build a bit more thoroughly than I did with the drill press cabinet.

Step one is to cut the main pieces out. I may be crazy, but I’m not stupid enough to try to wrangle a sheet of 3/4” plywood onto my portable table saw.

I use a circular saw to cut the pieces slightly oversized out of the 4×8 sheet. Then over to the table saw to cut them to the exact size.

This one is just right.

Make sure you keep track of which parts are which.

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Adding cradle vise to the drill press

So I wanted to be able to safely drill into the end of a piece of round stock, but couldn’t figure out a decent way to hold my work that kept my fingers away from sharp steel bits spinning at high speeds.

Then I went to Harbor Freight and found this cradle vice.

But now I need to be able to secure the vice to the drill press table and the hole on the vice don’t line up with the holes on the table at all.

I mean, I can bolt the vice down, but it won’t line up with the bit.
AT ALL!

A piece of 3/4 plywood will allow me to put holes anywhere I want to, so I grab a a scrap and cut it to match the table.

Continue reading “Adding cradle vise to the drill press”

Box joint jig for the table saw

I’ve gotten to the point where new projects don’t always* require purchasing** new tools. But as I work on more ambitious projects, I am building more tools & jigs.

When I built the drawer for the drill press cabinet, I was very dissatisfied with my results, so I started looking for something better.

Enter the box joint or finger joint jig.

I know it needs finish
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Band saw cabinet design

When I bought the bandsaw a few years ago, it was on this angle iron base. Perfectly functional, and purely functional. It works, but it looks like a bunch of angle iron off cuts (which is what it is).

Once I built the base for the drill press, I decided that the band saw needed a matching base.

Let’s take a little tour of my mental processes when designing a project like this.

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Sometimes it’s just your fear holding you back.

I’ve often considered making nicer projects in the wood shop, but up till now, I’ve pretty much limited myself to camping equipment.

Mostly it’s been fear that I can’t make something perfect. Add in the fact that I’m good at sourcing things that are pretty close to what I really want and then modifying them.

My first cabinet.

And it really kills me when people ask me if I built the cabinets in the dining room.

But it’s been itching at me. I keep kicking around ideas for custom cases for some older tools that don’t have them. And I keep coming up with excuses why I can’t do it.

Continue reading “Sometimes it’s just your fear holding you back.”

CAD (Cardboard Aided Design)

I know that I’m not the first one to come up with the idea, but much like graph paper is cheaper than lumber, cardboard is cheaper than any other building materials; especially when you keep your empty cereal boxes.

I’ve got this metal parts organizer in the garage. The biggest problem with it is that stuff gets lost in the back. I decided to make bins so I could easily get everything out. The perfect material would be sheet metal, but I’ve never worked with sheet metal before. Enter CAD.

I’ve made three prototypes, and finally got my design where I want it. My out of pocket expense is, some blue tape, three empty cereal boxes and a utility knife blade, so zero dollars. Now it’s time to get some metal and start making bins.

In the past, I’ve used cereal boxes & tape to dummy up lots of projects. The original camp kitchen idea was done in cardboard. This exercise proved that the vision I came up with while high was not something I could achieve and led to the simpler version that I originally built from wood.

I always keep a few empty boxes in the shop, you never know when you’re going to mock something up.