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Don Baer
02-03-2006, 11:47 AM
HOW TO MAKE A BOARD

-Dave Barry


Most of what I know about carpentry, which is almost nothing, I
learned in shop. I took shop during the Eisenhower
administration, when boys took shop and girls took home
economics--a code name for "cooking". Schools are not allowed to
separate boys and girls like that any more.

They're also not allowed to put students' heads in vises and
tighten them, which is what our shop teacher, Mr. Schmidt, did
to Ronnie Miller in the fifth grade when Ronnie used a chisel
when he should have used a screwdriver. (Mr. Schmidt had strong
feelings about how to use tools properly.) I guess he shouldn't
have put Ronnie's head in the vise, but it (Ronnie's head) was no
great prize to begin with, and you can bet Ronnie never confused
chisels and screwdrivers in later life. Assuming he made it to
later life.

Under Mr. Schmidt's guidance, we hammered out hundreds of the
ugliest and most useless objects the human mind can conceive of.
Our first major project was a little bookshelf that you could
also use as a stool. The idea was that some day you'd be looking
for a book, when all of a sudden you'd urgently need a stool, so
you'd just dump the books on the floor and there you'd be. At
least I assume that was the thinking behind the bookshelf-stool.
Mr. Schmidt designed it, and we students sure know better than to
ask any questions.

I regret today that I didn't take more shop in high school,
because while I have never once used anything I know about the
cosine and the tangent, I have used my shop skills to make many
useful objects for my home. For example, I recently made a board.

I use my board in many ways. I stand on it when I have to get
socks out of the dryer and water has been sitting in our basement
around the dryer for a few days, and has developed a pretty
healthy layer of scum on top (plus heaven-only-knows-what new
and predatory forms of life underneath).

I also use my board to squash spiders. (All spiders are deadly
killers. Don't believe any of the stuff you read in "National
Geographic".) Generally, after I squash a spider, I leave the
board in the water for a few days, spider-side down, to wash it
off, assuming the scum isn't too bad.

If you'd like to make a board, you'll need:

Materials: A board, paint.

Tools: A chisel, a handgun.

Get your board at a lumberyard, but be prepared. Lumberyards reek
of lunacy. They use a system of measurement that dates back to
Colonial times, when people had brains the size of M&Ms. When
they tell you a board is a "two- by-four", they mean it is NOT
two inches by four inches. Likewise, a "one-by-six" is NOT one
inch by six inches. So if you know what size board you want, tell
the lumberperson you want some other size. If you don't know what
size you want, tell him it's for squashing spiders. He'll know
what you need.

You should paint your board so people will know it's a home
carpentry project, as opposed to a mere board. I suggest you use
a darkish color, something along the lines of spider guts. Use
your chisel to open the paint can. Have your gun ready in case
Mr. Schmidt is lurking around.

Once you've finished your board, you can move on to a more
advanced project, such as a harpsichord. But if you're really
going to get into home carpentry, you should have a home
workshop. You will find that your workshop is very useful as a
place to store lawn sprinklers and objects you intend to fix
sometime before you die. My wife and I have worked out a simple
eight-step procedure for deciding which objects to store in my
home workshop:

1. My wife tells me an object is broken. For instance, she may
say, "The lamp on my bedside table doesn't work."

2. I wait several months, in case my wife is mistaken.

3. My wife notifies me she is not mistaken. "The lamp on my
bedside table still doesn't work," she says.

4. I conduct a preliminary investigation. In the case of the
lamp, I flick the switch and note that the lamp doesn't go on.
"You're right," I tell my wife. "That lamp doesn't work."

5. I wait 6 to 19 months, hoping that God will fix the lamp, or
the Russians will attack us and the entire world will be a
glowing heap of radioactive slag and nobody will care about
the lamp anymore.

6. My wife then alerts me that the lamp still doesn't work. "The
lamp still doesn't work," she says, sometimes late at night.

7. I try to repair the lamp on the spot. Usually, I look for a
likely trouble spot and whack it with a blunt instrument. This
often works on lamps. It rarely works on microwave ovens.

8. If the on-the-spot repair doesn't work, I say: "I'll have to
take this lamp down to the home workshop." This is my way of
telling my wife she should get another lamp if she has any
short-term plans--say, to do any reading in bed.

If you follow this procedure, after a few years you will have a
great many broken objects in your home workshop. In the interim,
however, it will look barren. This is why you need tools. To give
your shop an attractive, non-barren appearance, you should get
several thousand dollars' worth of tools and
hang them from pegboards in a graceful display.

Basically, there are four different kinds of tools:

Tools You Can Hit Yourself With (hammers, axes).

Tools You Can Cut Yourself With (saws, knives, hoes, adzes).

Tools You Can Stab Yourself With (screwdrivers, chisels).

Tools That, If Dropped Just Right, Can Penetrate Your Foot (awls).

I have a radial arm saw, which is like any other saw except that
it has a blade that spins at several billion revolutions per
second and therefore can sever your average arm in a trice. When
I operate my radial arm saw, I use a safety procedure that was
developed by X-ray machine technicians: I leave the room.

I turn off all the power in the house, leave a piece of wood near
the saw, scurry to a safe distance, and turn the power back on.
That is how I made my board.

Once you get the hang of using your tools, you'll make all kinds
of projects. Here are some other ones I've made:

A length of rope.
Wood with nails in it.
Sawdust.

If you'd like plans for any of these projects, just drop some
money in an envelope and send it to me and I'll keep it.



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tod evans
02-03-2006, 12:13 PM
very good don!

John Miliunas
02-03-2006, 12:19 PM
I love it! :) Problem is, I can relate to some of the stuff within!!!:o :rolleyes: :cool:

Karl Laustrup
02-03-2006, 1:07 PM
ROFLOL!! That is too funny. Good thing I have a sense of humor and can laugh at myself. :D I'm going to have to try that cutting stuff from out of the room.

Karl

Bob Noles
02-03-2006, 1:27 PM
Don,

I love it..... Not sure why, but a lot of the content sounds way to familiar :eek:

Frank Pellow
02-03-2006, 1:35 PM
Thanks for providing me with a lunch-time laugh Don. I expect that I will be chuckling over this for the rest of the day (as I paint some boards ;) )

Jim Dunn
02-03-2006, 4:48 PM
I've got the saw dust part down pat.

Vaughn McMillan
02-03-2006, 6:50 PM
Dave Barry is one of my favorite authors (you can tell from that statement alone that I'm not a highly-cultured person). Little did I know he had so much experience with workshops.

Regarding the remotely-operated RAS, I've done something similar when using the belt sander when a breaker popped. I have learned, through astute observation, that a B&D belt sander can indeed fly if you leave the trigger locked to the "On" position when you flip the breaker switch. :D

- Vaughn