I think a lot of people get wrapped up in getting ready for the holidays, black Friday, cyber Monday. Shop time for those special gifts and custom orders. And don't forget the ones trying to get over that extended food coma from all the Turkey.
If you have a cloth tape measure ( the kind seamstress use ) measure around all the pulleys. Then measure the width of the groove in the pulley. Take these number to a local parts store and they can probably match something up for you. If you don't have a cloth tape, a piece of clothes line will work too. Just stretch it around the pulleys and mark where they meet.
I use mainly straight blades. Just a preference. Both have a proper time and place for usage. Best to experiment on scrap wood to get the feel and understanding of each. Depending on what I am doing I swap back and forth between the two types. Experience is the best teacher.
Just told the wife about this. Her first comment was it is made with formaldehyde . Looking into this it depends on the brand. There are chemical free polishes available so if your going to use this, be careful . Learn something new everyday. Thought this was worth noting.
Never gave that a thought. The wife has a ton of it laying around she don't use. If it is thick I have acetone to help with that. I think it would be a better solution than lacquer thinner which I also keep. I'll mention it to her since she does the painting of things. Might work better for ornaments. Thanks for posting this.
I have never used soy wax for anything. The first that comes to mind is would the wax chemically bond with mineral spirits ? Soy wax is a lot softer then bee's wax so what king of protection would it offer ? Maybe someone can give you a definitive answer for this. I know my wife shops at Michaels and you can definitely beat their everyday prices. So Cindy will watch for coupons sale ads etc. I'm going to try and follow this out of curiosity as to what others opinions or experiences are.
Nice work, look's great. I use a bench hook and Japanese pull saw. Clean quick and dependable. As for length, set up a stop block, slide the dowel over cut, repeat.
As for the pricing issue. I would base prices on the replacement price. It's what your going to spend to get new stock. We have done our best to keep our prices down but ultimately the increased cost of replacement materials made it impossible. Everyone seems to understand that all prices have gone up considerably .
If using a diluted based pigment I would pretreat the pieces with a conditioner. It helps a lot of things as well as getting the color coat more even. BB is a lot like pine when staining it.
Just looked at them in my shop. They are the Polyethylene plugs that are recessed. I know they worked great and install with a forstner bit. I can recommend them from my experience.
I can see a lot of pieces that could e stack cut. I would carefully check the 2 wheels, but don't see why you couldn't. Like Dan said, a lot of small goals should make this more enjoyable. Keep us posted on your progress.
I would try 2 things. First using a slightly larger blade, that should increase the width of the kerf. Second. slow the feed rate down, give it a chance to clear the kerf out. So sort of slower speed on feed and blade speed.