• 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!

Mike builds a teardrop (cedar detail)

Not even the tiniest patch on your masterpiece Mike but I found the mudguard design on this teardrop interesting. It occurred to me that a bit of modification could incorporate a step or even storage for wheel wedges, jack etc.

View attachment 55154
Yes, that's.....unusual. My first thought is that they would make getting in and out of the door slightly more awkward than it already is.
 
I wanted the cedar strips which go up and over the roof to have a contrasting bottom end, following the theme of the side walls. I got out the same router jig I made for them some months ago, and did some random patterns on the ends of 14 strakes. The rest will be hidden behind a tongue box, in due course:

IMG_0230.jpg

IMG_0231.jpg

IMG_0243.jpg

IMG_0244.jpg

Unfortunately, when I was cleaning up one of them, the cedar strip snapped. I might have over-cut the edge of one of the housings for ash, maybe:

IMG_0240.jpg

I haven't got enough of the long strips (3.6m) which do the whole length of the roof, so I couldn't afford to chuck this and make another. So, I flipped it over, cut out a bit on the back of each piece, and glued it together with a bit of ash:

IMG_0241.jpg

IMG_0242.jpg

Another part of the pattern is a pair of go-faster stripes. These are in ash, but with a bog oak contrasting strip on either side. I didn't have long enough pieces of ash, so I scarfed 2 together (times 2):

IMG_0232.jpg

By pure fluke, the two strips fit really snugly side-by-side inside my aluminium channel straight-edge, so I glued them up and squeezed them in to keep everything straight:

IMG_0233.jpg

IMG_0234.jpg

The following day I prised them out and cleaned up:

IMG_0235.jpg

IMG_0236.jpg

The join is in an invisible location on top of the roof, otherwise I would have had to use a nib to give a neat square join line.

I had some off-cuts of bog oak left over after making the laminated galley-wall edges some months ago:

IMG_0237.jpg

By pure luck, they are about the same thickness as the cedar strips. My plan was to glue them to the ash now, because I didn't fancy my chances of bending them into place whilst smeared in PU glue. They're only about 1.5m long, though, so they needed a join. I did a mitre/ scarf, simply so that a gap didn't open up as they are bent around a curve. It's not for strength. Thirty seconds with a chisel:

IMG_0238.jpg

I glued them to the ash:

IMG_0239.jpg

This is the back side. It's the other side which is flush.

I can do about an hour at a time now, so there is some visible progress. I glued and foamed 6 of the newly decorated strips into place. There are some real awkwardnesses about that, though. Firstly, trying to hold a 3.6m long floppy strip on edge on top of a curved roof whilst applying glue, with your forearms resting in the squeeze-out from the strips you've just put in place. Secondly, firing the foam in blind, as the gap is on the far side, away from you, and you have to point the foam gun towards yourself on the roof. It's OK when you're on the floor. Anyway, here's the photo:

IMG_0245.jpg
 
I really hope this all counts as physiotherapy Mike.

But it's good to see you back at it again, and it's lucky you didn't injure yourself when you were wrangling two ton oak beams - then you might have been tempted to really do too much too soon.
 
................We only have one iron and I often have to smuggle it into my workshop...

Dangerous practice.
Is it worth the risk of divorce when you can buy one at somewhere like ASDA for less than a tenner or charity shops and boot sales for 50p. :ROFLMAO:
 
Back
Top