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View Full Version : It's All Dave Anderson's Fault



Mark Stutz
09-25-2005, 9:53 PM
One year ago, I was delightfully cruising the "other" forum here at SMC, blithely burning electrons with the majority, and getting my youngest off to school in Boston. In Oct. we went to Boston for Parent's Wekend, and having heard about how much fun it was to visit other woodworkers, I arranged to meet Dave Anderson. He is a nice enough guy ;) on the surface, but then I made the fatal blunder! I went into his shop. :eek: Now if any one out there wants to know the definition of the "slippery slope",... it is Dave's basement stairs :eek: :D To show you haw slippery it is, I even went back for a tool auction! :D
Having slid so far in a year, I was running out of bench space so decided to build a plane cabinet. This was going to be a quick utility cabinet out of Borg plywood, until my Neander skills were such that I could truly do one justice. After a very frustrating weekend with theKreg jig (http://www.sawmillcreek.org/search.php?searchid=448158) it sat for a while. During one of the Thur. nite hand tool chats, I discussed the plywood with Richard Gillespie. He had problems with rust using ply, and I was concerned that the 1/8 cork wouldn't be enough, so I set some old (new Stanleys) on it for a month as a test. No rust :D .
The ply carcase is "blonde wood" from the Blue Borg...have no idea what is is, but is very similar in color to Prima vera. I decided to spruce it up a little. The faux panels hide the screw holes! All the solid pieces were jointed and surfaced without electrons...just about the extent of my Neander skills at this point. The darker wood is Tzalam. Finish is GF Arm-R-Seal.
Thanks for letting me share

Jim Becker
09-25-2005, 10:25 PM
Yup...you slipped right down that slop, big guy! Very nice cabinet to compliment your most excellent selection of planes. (I wish I had a wall to hang a cabinet like this one on...that's the downside to lots of windows, I guess)

Mike Wenzloff
09-25-2005, 10:28 PM
Very nice one, Mark!

Yet another one for inspiration when I go to make a new one. I like the wood contrast. There but very complimentary. Nice job on the faux panels, too. Good way to hide the screws. Well done.

Mike

Steve Clardy
09-25-2005, 10:41 PM
Looks nice. Now don't buy any more, or you'll be making an addition to that nice looking cabinet. Lol

Tom Stovell
09-25-2005, 10:46 PM
Mark,
That is a real nice job and a great place to store your planes. Good job--but as Steve mentioned, it looks like you'll need another cabinet in short time.

Tom

Roy Wall
09-25-2005, 11:06 PM
Mark,

THe rack looks great!! Nice efficient storage. And good job using those planes - they are fun!

Nice #8 there.....BTW:cool:

If we ever get to the opposite ends of the state - lets do lunch!!

Derek Cohen
09-25-2005, 11:08 PM
Terrific design, Mark (I think I will keep a copy for reference). But not enough planes! You gotta work on that side. :)

Regards from Perth

Derek

Joe Blankshain
09-25-2005, 11:37 PM
Mark, great job on the cabinet. Now repeat after me "more planes....need more planes" You know that this is just the beginning. Great collection of useful instruments in a nice house.

Dev Emch
09-26-2005, 3:56 AM
You ever see an english teacher grade a term paper on nuclear physics.:rolleyes:

Well, lets see..... There is a Lie Nielson, a record bailey, a stanley 45, either a primus or an ECE pear wood finishing plane, a record #9, and shucks, the response form does not allow us to view pictures.

This is a nice cabinet but I see some vacant space.:D I think a DSP Norris infill would look just swell in there. Esp. one with brass sides and rosewood or one with stainless steel sides and African Blackwood trimmed out in brass. Yuummmmmm Yummmmm!

Yup, your on the way down a slippery slope and you know you love it. Great job and keep up the good work!

Tony Falotico
09-26-2005, 6:39 AM
I hear ya Mark! I find myself lurking here more and more, Then I begin to find myself reaching for those cordless things in the shop more and more. No, I've not slipped, YET.......... but is sure getting slicker.

Thanks to my friends at SMC (and watching David Marks), my planes are getting used more often, and I've recently discovered scrapers............. and the chisels seem to be out from hiding more often............. :) :) :)

Jeff Sudmeier
09-26-2005, 8:49 AM
Mark,

You sure have dove in head first!! I haven't yet and I am resisting the pull, for now :)

Great job on the cabinet.

Robert Tarr
09-26-2005, 9:19 AM
Great till!

I saw a couple cherry handles in there and and a couple from our friends in Canada. The one I am really interesting in, is the one on the table. Is that a panel raiser?

Have fun and wait until you start getting into saws.....

Robert

Mark Stutz
09-26-2005, 10:33 AM
To all, thanks for the kind words. I purposely didn't show it empty so the planes would take ones eyes away from the mistakes. :D :eek:

Robert, yes tht is a panel raiser. I doubt it can be used "as is", though I haven't tried yet. It was pretty cheap as these go, and I thought I might be able to use it as a pattern to try to make one. The cherry handled ones sure are nice to use.

Dev, good eyes. Yes LN, and Record, though 5 1/2 and #7. The combo plane is a #46. I've played around with it and like it.

When I started, it was only about half full! A friend of mine gave me the Records and ECE because he wanted to see them used, since he quit woodwotking about 10 years ago.

Bob Noles
09-26-2005, 11:12 AM
Mark....


Wow! I am green with envy. That is a super nice job. I may have to steel (I mean borrow :D ) some ideas from it.

You do good work and that is some plane collection you have.

Dave Anderson NH
09-26-2005, 12:21 PM
Isn't it amazing that folks never take responsibility for their own addictions?:D It's always the fault of some other totally innocent party.:rolleyes:

Your plane cabinet came out really well Mark. I strongly suggest however that you make a set of dimensioned sketches of it while things are still fresh in your mind. After all, you are going to need to make a mate for it very soon !! The few spaces left open just aren't going to be able to hold your soon to be acquired: 16pc half set of hollows and rounds, complex molding planes, infill smoothers, #98-#99 rebate trimmers, scraper planes, compass planes, #140 skewed block plane, and a few other miscellaneous items.:eek: The way I figure it, at a minimum, you're about 30-40 slots short. I sure hope you have a lot of wall space left unoccupied.

Now about that saw till.......

Mark Stutz
09-26-2005, 1:11 PM
Dave,
I saved all my drawings! ;) I still have 2 open slots for that infill and another, and the champfer plane can live in a drawer when the skewed block eventually comes! Note that I did say eventually... I can recognize an affliction when it is present. :D I have the saw till drawings done! I would really like to learn to sharpen them in order to use them to make it, but since that may take some time, I may just break down and send them to Cooke's.

Dan Moening
09-26-2005, 4:12 PM
That is a fine looking cabinet!

I like the space saving block plane cubbies. Wish I had thought of that.

Dan Forman
09-26-2005, 4:41 PM
Really nice job, like the contrasting woods. I need to come with some sort of storage for my planes, good to know that the cork is effective in protecting them from plywood.

Dan

Mike Wenzloff
09-26-2005, 4:41 PM
Hi Mark,

When you get the till done, please post it, too. I've been going back and forth on building a seperate new tool cabinet and a new saw till and or combining them into a single, floor standing cabinet. But a seperate till might be nice. My old one is no more, so I gotta do something.

These darn saws just keep multiplying...

Mike

Vince Sandy
09-27-2005, 5:39 PM
Nice. Very nice. I need one of those.

Vince