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View Full Version : a W.I.P. Butcher block kitchen island.



Bryan Cowing
09-11-2011, 5:37 AM
My son wants an island with an end grain top. I have been working on this 30x43 base since June. I now have started making the 5" thick end grain top.207350207349207348207347207346

Bryan Cowing
09-11-2011, 5:42 AM
making the top from 6/4 maple off cuts I got for a $100. Gluing up 30 wide x 22" section, which makes 4 pcs at just over 5" high when cut and planed. So far got 11" of top made up, got to make 4 more glue ups to get enough for 43" of top.207353207352I cut the glue up in half, plane, then cut again
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Jim Foster
09-12-2011, 11:33 PM
This is going to be a nice butcher block!

Bryan Cowing
09-13-2011, 5:48 AM
Thanks. So far I am two strips short. Spent 7 am till 8 pm, and now have 38" of strips I calculate the top will weigh 174 pounds. 5.8 per strip x 30:eek::eek:207518

Jake Elkins
09-13-2011, 8:43 AM
That's going to be a fantastic work surface. Looks great.

Have you thought about how you will flatten that? I built one of nearly similar size, and I would have saved about two weeks of time and a few tubes of icy hot if I just got it in mind to build a router sled from the beginning. If I had to flatten one again with handplanes, I would glue a sacrificial board to each end to mitigate the end-grain blow out.

Can't wait to see this finished.

Gregory King
09-13-2011, 9:17 AM
Bryan, you just wanted to show off that great looking lathe. General or Grizzly? The project looks interesting. Enjoy. Greg

Bryan Cowing
09-13-2011, 12:49 PM
That's going to be a fantastic work surface. Looks great.

Have you thought about how you will flatten that? I built one of nearly similar size, and I would have saved about two weeks of time and a few tubes of icy hot if I just got it in mind to build a router sled from the beginning. If I had to flatten one again with handplanes, I would glue a sacrificial board to each end to mitigate the end-grain blow out.

Can't wait to see this finished. At 7 am I glued up 10 slices, about 14", and during lunch break, I ran it through the planer. I ran the 3/4 radius bit over the one end to stop blowout. 207525207524

Bryan Cowing
09-13-2011, 12:51 PM
Bryan, you just wanted to show off that great looking lathe. General or Grizzly? The project looks interesting. Enjoy. Greg General 260-1 VS I have had it for 16 years already.

Mac Cambra
09-13-2011, 9:18 PM
So any tricks you care share on how to do those pommel cuts on the lathe. I think the leg design is beautiful. I always make a mess of the wood when I attempt the pommels (square to round transitions).

Bryan Cowing
09-13-2011, 9:34 PM
Once I have it ruffed out, I use the skew on it's flat to slowly smooth it up. I still get slight chipping. What I do now is make the blank 1/8" oversize or so, take a 1/16" pass on the jointer, then re turn any spots the jointer may have flattened.
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Mac Cambra
09-13-2011, 10:01 PM
What do you mean you clean it up by using the skew on its "flat"? Are you using the skew like a scraper?

Bryan Cowing
09-14-2011, 5:21 AM
What do you mean you clean it up by using the skew on its "flat"? Are you using the skew like a scraper? I don't have a scraper. A freshly sharpened skew, used very lightly to clean up the ruff surface. The ash was very hard to cut the square areas. The legs are 4& 5/8" square when I started, the corners are very large, very difficult to cut.

Bryan Cowing
09-14-2011, 1:27 PM
kid want's a knife slot, added a 1/4 spacer of walnut, waiting on approval from him before I glue up the last section207583.

Floyd Cox
09-14-2011, 4:50 PM
That is going to be one beautiful peice when you are finished.
No offence but I am glad I'm not going to have to help you move it in place when your through.

Bryan Cowing
09-14-2011, 5:11 PM
That is going to be one beautiful peice when you are finished.
No offence but I am glad I'm not going to have to help you move it in place when your through. Top is 175, easy for two to carry, and base is around 80 pounds. I will be using metal clips to keep the top in position.

Bryan Cowing
09-15-2011, 10:16 PM
almost done the top :):)207732

Bryan Cowing
09-17-2011, 7:59 PM
1st coat of stain.207912

Bryan Cowing
09-18-2011, 12:03 PM
2079372nd coat stain early this am, now have 1 st coat lacquer

Bryan Cowing
09-18-2011, 4:18 PM
207969finished the finish!:)

Peter Aeschliman
09-19-2011, 12:25 AM
Gorgeous. That's going to make the rest of your son's kitchen look humble. So you know what this means- next he'll be asking for new cabinets!!

Well done!

Bryan Cowing
09-19-2011, 5:08 AM
Thanks! I hope he brings lots of help to move it to his house;)

Jimmy Williams
09-19-2011, 8:16 AM
That looks "sturdy". I think if that were at my house, I'd be using the cabinet space underneath as my bad weather safe room. I really like the thickness of the top. Great work.