• Hi all and welcome to TheWoodHaven2 brought into the 21st Century, kicking and screaming! We all have Alasdair to thank for the vast bulk of the heavy lifting to get us here, no more so than me because he's taken away a huge burden of responsibility from my shoulders and brought us to this new shiny home, with all your previous content (hopefully) still intact! Please peruse and feed back. There is still plenty to do, like changing the colour scheme, adding the banner graphic, tweaking the odd setting here and there so I have added a new thread in the 'Technical Issues, Bugs and Feature Requests' forum for you to add any issues you find, any missing settings or just anything you'd like to see added/removed from the feature set that Xenforo offers. We will get to everything over the coming weeks so please be patient, but add anything at all to the thread I mention above and we promise to get to them over the next few days/weeks/months. In the meantime, please enjoy!

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  1. R

    Terminology - Two countries, separated by a common language

    I suckedin a bit hard Accipter when I saw the column headers. I've got to admit that it riles me up a bit when I see the three other countries that make up Great Britain or the United KIngdom rather dismissed and excluded and somehow subsumed into a greater England. I guess I get that...
  2. R

    Hanging a door. Some finer points

    What you say is, in my experience, normal. I was instructed to do it that way when I was a trainee because 'It's always been done that way ... no idea why, really' was the way it was put to me. I personally can't think of a decent technical explanation, e.g., it's stronger that way. I suspect...
  3. R

    Hanging a door. Some finer points

    Projection hinges are an option for throwing a door clear of an architrave. A Parliament hinge can do similar. Of course you may not need such a hinge, but it's useful to know that's an option. I used Parliament hinges from time to time, especially on workshop doors to allow them to open fully...
  4. R

    Wedged M&Ts

    Regarding wedges. I suspect the method I use most often is because I'm a furniture maker. I widen the mortice leaving the inner few millimetres square. The reason for this is that the inner mortice length matches the tenon width, thus the tenoned part can't be caused to to drift left or right as...
  5. R

    Cigar humidor?

    Yes, constant, perhaps better described as trying to equalise humidity throughout the interior as much as possible. The holes should allow air within the humidor to circulate reasonably. There's a shallow hole bored front and back so that a finger from each hand can lift that tray out...
  6. R

    Cigar humidor?

    Here are a couple I made in the late 1990s. You can get hygrometers and humidifiers from Amazon, but there are specialist suppliers too. As you surmise basically a box, in this case of walnut and cherry dovetailed together. The lining and trays were made out of cedar of lebanon, left unfinished...
  7. R

    Resawing thick timbers...

    Evolution R255TBL+ saws are quite dinky really, at 1800 Watts (~2.4 HP in theory) and aimed at the site market. Has it got the balls and stability on its small table plus fence to handle deeping big lumps of wood? I'd say it would be doable in stages with caution and good additional...
  8. R

    Dividers for book shelves

    As a by the by, typical book shelf loading is ~11kg per 300 mm shelf length, roughly the same as 25 lbs per 12" (foot) length. This applies to 'standard' books, e.g., a mix of paperback novels and textbooks along with typical hardback novels and textbooks. Large format books, such as it seems...
  9. R

    Dividers for book shelves

    I'd do exactly the same, but add the ability to make the shelves adjustable with shelf pins, or similar, e.g., tonks. It would make the construction logical and simpler. As to the shelves, it's true that once set up they're rarely adjusted again, but it can happen, I've done so a few times, and...
  10. R

    Chairs - Done!

    Very nice, indeed. Slainte.
  11. R

    Solar Kiln, promising progress.

    It's good that they responded. The reply confirms what I suspected. Now that you know that you are able, if you so desire, to convert the readings from the dry basis to the wet basis. I've included some conversions in the wee table below. As you can see 25%MCdb = 20%MCwb %MCwb (Wet Basis) =...
  12. R

    Solar Kiln, promising progress.

    I suspect your moisture meter reads on the dry basis (db). I say that because it appears that the user guide doesn't specify that it reads on the wet basis, or can switch. I can't tell from the photos what brand you have, but it might be worth your while contacting the manufacturer or the...
  13. R

    Solar Kiln, promising progress.

    If that moisture meter is measuring on the dry basis that 26% MC you have is within about 0.2% of what can be labelled as Ready to Burn in compliance with the government legislation for the biomass fuel sector, i.e., the wood has to be ≤20% MC to be labelled as Ready to Burn. If you recall I...
  14. R

    Simple door

    If I remember correctly the main materials used for the construction were Douglas fir and birch(?) plywood for panels, seating and other bits plus a bit of show oak and brass hardware. It was forty plus years ago I had a role in the construction of these choir stalls, and I left that company for...
  15. R

    Simple door

    The trick with the spring clamps is you can simply hold the two laths together with your hands lengthening and shortening them whilst moving the laths around in the space until you find the shortest dimension. At that point the clamps are applied and the end of each lath is marked on to its...
  16. R

    Simple door

    Actually Roger, I was wrong, because there wasn't a forceful contributor, so I apologise for the potential mischaracterisation. However, it was Jacob who suggested a possible difference between rod, story stick and story pole but he wasn't at all dogmatic about it. It all came out in a thread by...
  17. R

    Simple door

    When I lived in the US I learnt that what Americans called a story stick is what I know as a rod. As far as I could tell they were essentially one and the same, along the same lines a rabbet (USA) and rebate (British), but then over at UKWorkshop maybe some years back now there were contributors...
  18. R

    Simple door

    Rods are still good practice in many circumstances, even though digital drafting can lead directly to machining wood using CNC technology frequently limiting the requirement for rods. But even now, there are many oddball shaped and sized things where rods have the edge over digital technology...
  19. R

    Level? In what Universe!

    That maybe falls into the 'Fits where it touches, which may not be many places, but where it touches, it fits' category. Slainte.
  20. R

    Solar Kiln, promising progress.

    Just in case you're not quite sure of the difference between the wet basis and dry basis methods for determining wood MC here is a link to a short blog post at Lost Art Press that appeared at about the same time as they republished Cut & Dried last year. Slainte.
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