GaryR
Nordic Pine
I like the scale and proportions of the entry way. And all of the details. So many places for the eye to rest.
Yes all sorts of well written interesting information that will be very helpful to a lot of people. If you put it in a book it would end up as a best seller. Keep it up Mike.If you go back through this 10 year long thread, Mark, you'll find all sorts of stuff which doesn't normally pop up on a woodworking forum!![]()
Would it not be be better on the lime render to use a Doff or Thermatec machine to remove the limewash, less chance of damage to the substrate. however, I'm assuming that if you've trialled then you are comfortable with the resultsThe tallow is in the limewash only, not in the render....and the limewash hasn't bonded terribly well with the lime render. It isn't completely straight forward to pressure-wash off, but it does come off, albeit slowly. I've done a test patch on the back wall.
If you go back through this 10 year long thread, Mark, you'll find all sorts of stuff which doesn't normally pop up on a woodworking forum!![]()
It will certainly all be done in the next 6 months, ready to put up for sale to start again on the next wreck.
(Everything after "next 6 months" was a joke!)
I'm not sure what form a "final show-around" might take. What did you have in mind?






Did they? I didn't know.Now I know why Victorian diy manuals devoted so much space to doorbells!
Whilst not exactly common, I have seen one or two like this over the years. My best buddy lives in a house a couple of hundred years older than mine, and he has one virtually identical that came with the house. I bought mine new.This is most interesting Mike as I have never seen a door bell like this!
Absolutely splendid work Mike, love the doorbell!My door bell isn't standard, and I am not sure whether or not I have posted about it previously. It's very much "Upstairs Downstairs" or "Downton Abbey". The door bell itself has been in and working for years. You pull a handle outside:
View attachment 31728
This pulls a braided wire over a series of pulleys:
View attachment 31729
and ends up pulling a bell on a big spring:
View attachment 31730
So far, so good.
The problem is that there are two doors between the person pulling the handle outside, and the bell inside. This means they can't hear any response to their effort, and so end up pulling it again and again, assuming that it isn't working.
I decided to put another bell on the system, just inside the door. I bought a bell on Ebay, then made a mock up and worked out what I wanted to do, before heading to the lathe.
Here are the bits:
View attachment 31732
And here it is in situ:
View attachment 31727
View attachment 31731
The wire will be looped around the near-vertical arm (once the glue is dry), which nudges the bell arm via the little knob and sets it all ringing. It has to be like this, rather than attaching the wire direct to the bell arm, because otherwise the new bell would be fighting with the main bell, and the latter wouldn't work. I know, because I tried. This was a more complex design issue than you'd think.




















Bingo!Possibly a middle rail ?
Everything is flush, Peter. Anyway, have a quick look up and you'll see the answer I came up with.Staff bead. A nice staff bead to set the panels in. Or a bolection moulding.














