January/February 2014 Archives - Woodworking | Blog | Videos | Plans | How To https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/magazine-issue/januaryfebruary-2014/ America's Leading Woodworking Authority Wed, 13 Mar 2024 22:10:57 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.0.7 PROJECT: Bed/Desk Combo https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/project-bed-desk-combo/ Thu, 05 Apr 2018 19:24:09 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=43828 Here's a new twist on the old Murphy bed, featuring cherry lumber and some innovative hardware.

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I was asked if I could build a Murphy Bed/Desk combo. Of course I can, I thought to myself! It involves some cool new hardware and unique challenges that sound interesting, and the whole concept would be a useful space saver. (My wonderful studio home is a whopping 475 square feet.)

The project went together fairly easily with simultaneous work on different sections. I started with a mock-up to be sure the hardware would be located properly, created the case, constructed the desktop, constructed the bed, and then put it all together.

Before starting, there are some things one must consider. I decided to show 1/4″ solid wood edging on all the exposed plywood edges, and the measurements listed reflect that. You could use edge banding rather than solid wood, but you will need to adjust the measurements accordingly. Editor Rob Johnstone suggested I try Rockler’s Edge V-groove Bit to cap the plywood edges, and it worked fine after some practice.

I created an MDF mock-up to confirm that the metric conversions for the hardware would indeed work. Imperial measurements are very ingrained in our work habits, but I do think metric could be easier for all of us. Fractions don’t come naturally for everyone. Sometimes my new students look at me cross-eyed if asked for something like 5/16″. Fractions, I tell them, take practice.

Why Build a Mock-up?

Installing Murphy bed hardware on test desk

A mock-up is just an even safer version of the measure twice, cut once practice. Once you have the case pieces built out of the final material, you’ll want to be sure you drill the holes in the proper place, unless you are a fan of the Swiss cheese look or of wasting good wood.

Extending bed prototype with Murphy bed arm

The arm mechanism of the bed/desk required a little bit of tweaking on the mock-up to get the desk resting flat on the floor in the bed position and perfectly level in the desk position.

Testing Murphy bed hardware

If you follow our measurements, you will be fine. But if you modify the plan, be sure to make your own mock-up to work out the details. You’ll be glad you did!

The Case

Cutting down large plywood panel for desk parts
Cutting up 3/4″-thick plywood is one of the first major tasks in building the bed/desk. Here, the author has the table saw set up to rip large pieces.

Starting with the large ends of the case, cut the cherry plywood to size on the table saw. Before establishing and routing the curved sections on the case sides, you must rout the V-shape into the straight edges of the plywood. After that, move on to the curved sections, which have a nice solid wood edge treatment attached with a butt joint.

Marking out arcs on plywood panel for desk
Cutting the arcs and matching curved hardwood edging for the case sides required a step-by-step process.

Achieving a solid wood edge on the curved section of the side requires patience and a trick or two. First, I made a couple of trammels out of a scrap piece of MDF. Then I established the pivot point for the trammels at the corner of the work table.

Cutting curves in desk panel with jigsaw

I put the plywood that would become the side on the table and scribed the arc I would be routing onto the plywood using the first trammel. Marking the setup so that I could put the plywood exactly back in place, I used a handheld jigsaw to rough out the arc, leaving about 1/16″ or so to trim off.

Routing curve in desk panel using a pivot point
Using trammels to scribe and cut the arcs is the key. It is very important to locate the plywood pieces and the pivot point for the trammels accurately and securely.

Now, with the second trammel set up to cut the arc perfectly, I put the plywood end piece back on the table with a piece of plywood underneath to boost it away from the table (you don’t want to rout into your table). The arm of the trammel needs to be parallel to the table to get a perpendicular cut. You can achieve that by drilling a hole the size of the pivot dowel in small scraps and adding the scraps at the pivot point. Attach the router to the trammel, centering a straight bit in the hole. I used a 3/8″ carbide-tipped straight bit. (Please, be sure to have your router unplugged while you are setting up. I’m a fan of my fingers, and I’m guessing you like yours, too.) Adjust the plywood again so that the edge of the bit aligns with the scribed line. Turning the bit so that you are aligning with the outermost point is imperative to getting the cut where you want it. Clamp the plywood side piece to the table securely. Now plug in the router, and clean up the jigsawn edge by routing that perfect curve from left to right.

Router bit for smoothing edges of bed/desk panel edge

Repeat the process for the second side piece, but before you remove it from the work table, drill a second pivot hole in the trammel that will locate the edge of the router bit to the other side of the arc you just cut.

Marking pivot locations for routing curves in desk parts
Then, by moving the location of the pivot holes in the trammel, you can precisely cut all three arcs required to get perfect results.

This will allow you to rout the matching curve in the hardwood you’ll use for your edging. Label these holes so that you will know which is which. Grab your hardwood stock and mark the curve from the plywood onto the hardwood.

Using band saw to cut out curved pieces for desk edge banding

Cut the curve on the hardwood piece using either the jigsaw or band saw, again leaving at least 1/16″ extra. Place the hardwood piece on the table where it will match up with the plywood curve and then remove the plywood. Rotate the router bit so that the innermost tip is just touching the line on the solid wood.

Routing curves in plywood panel for bed/desk
Use the same process on the bed ends to shape and edge those plywood pieces.

Take note: you’ll be routing in the opposite direction this time. In order to not have clamps in the way of the trammel, I screwed the solid wood piece (a good portion of the solid piece will be scrap) into a piece of MDF which I clamped to the table. Please, make sure the trammel arm is now perpendicular to the table again. Now you can rout that curve!

Attaching edging to desk side panel
Clever clamping is required to get a sound butt joint between the curved case side and the solid hardwood piece that will later be routed away to leave only 1/4″ of edging.

I glued the solid wood curve to the plywood by using some creative clamping. Because much of the solid wood piece will be cut away, screw a slightly wider but just as long scrap to the top of it. Clamp two pieces of scrap wood on the front and back faces of the plywood. Now you have two parallel surfaces so you can get good clamping pressure on the curve. Glue the curves together now, and leave the ends of the solid wood long. I usually let glue-ups set overnight.

Plywood brace used to hold edge banding in place
Scrap MDF is screwed to the hardwood piece to help spread the clamping pressure.

Once the glued curve is dry, take the base side back to the trammel table. If you used a 3/8″ straight router bit, drill another hole in the trammel arm, making the distance from the first hole 5/8″ less (1/4″ for the edging and 3/8″ to account for the straight bit). Label the three holes on the trammel to use them later on the bed end curve. Yes, you will be doing this exciting exercise again later! Mark on the solid wood where you want the edge to be (for me it was 1/4″ from the plywood to leave a 1/4″ solid wood edge). Mark this curve with a pencil on the solid wood that is now glued to the plywood. Use a jigsaw to cut the curve, leaving at least 1/16″ extra. Align the pieces so the router bit cuts the curve and leaves 1/4″ of solid wood edging glued in place.

Using bar clamps to glue-up edging on desk panel
Glue and clamp the V-shaped hardwood edging onto the front and back edges of the case. Don’t apply too much pressure, or you’ll split the plywood.

After those tricky curves, the next steps may seem like a breeze. Rip the plywood for the top, bottom crossbar, and back of the case. The top stretcher is made from solid wood as well as solid wood edging strips for the bottom stretcher, case sides, bed ends, top and bottom of the bed rails. See the Material List for the dimensions and details of all these pieces. Then go ahead and rout the rest of the plywood edges for the case with the V-groove bit.

Sanding pieces for installing edge banding
The author needed to shape the top end of the front V strip to fit the curved hardwood piece.

Next I moved on to making the body concealers, locking pin blocks, bed stops, and top of the case molding, which are all pretty straight forward. Just follow the sizes and pre-drill according to the Material List and the Drawings. Then I decided to put the top of the case together using the fabulous Festool Domino. The Domino is such a fun tool, and the Festool tools have such great dust collection! I sanded up to 180-grit before gluing up the top of the case. You should sand each group of pieces before gluing, even if I don’t keep reminding you to do so. Remove any pencil lines, etc. Remember, work smarter, not harder.

Before the case sides can be assembled, you must mark and drill for the hardware. I marked where to drill the holes by placing the hardware plate on the case inside and measuring from the bottom and the back side to the edge of the hardware plate. Then mark the center of the holes in the hardware plate. For the piston mounting bracket, the measurements are for marking to the center of the holes. Since the case sides are much too big to get on the drill press, use your combination square next to your drill to help you drill perpendicular holes.

And remember, at some point, you’ll need to notch out the little section on the bottom back of the case to make room for the baseboard. Attach the body concealers, locking pin blocks, and bed stops by countersinking and pre-drilling the holes. I covered the screw heads later using plastic screw cap covers for Phillips and Square-X screws. These little covers snap right in the screw heads, if you countersink to the proper depth.

Moving forward, the case sides, back, and bottom stretcher need to have their Domino mortises machined. In order to get the bottom stretcher where you want it (kind of floating behind the hardware), measure and mark a line to align the Domino machine perpendicular with the bottom of the case. Set all these parts aside now and move on to the desk.

The Desk

Murphy bed base for bed/desk combo
The tri-bearer needs to be mounted before the desk components are assembled. Part of the hardware will be captured by the wood.

The desk assembly is very similar to the case top construction. Rip the desktop to width, use the edge V-groove to attach the solid wood front support, and then cut it to length. Next, make the desk sides and the back out of solid wood. Measure, mark and drill for the hardware that attaches to the desk sides, including the tri-bearer, link pivot and locking pin. You will bolt the tri-bearer to the desk sides now, before gluing up. The cap nuts used with the connector bolts will be concealed in the desktop.

Go ahead and cut Domino mortises in the sides and back to the desktop. I used the same clamping trick of clamping solid wood strips to the desktop in order to get a right clamping angle using short clamps for the desk sides. Then I glued the desk back on.

Edge Banding with V-groove Bits

V-groove router bit in router table
Setup

This project requires about 700 lineal inches of wood edging to cover the plywood edges. I used an Edge V-groove Bit set to attach most of it so the joints would be interlocking. But they only work on straight edges that don’t intersect on the same piece to form an inside corner.

Starting cut for V-groove banding in plywood panel
Cut

It’s necessary to cover the curved plywood edges and two intersecting straight edges on the bed ends without using the Edge V-groove Bits. I just used a butt joint for those edges.

Setting up router cut for matched V-groove banding
Setup

The setup for the Edge V-groove Bit is pretty straightforward. The negative “V” will be cut into the plywood, and you will align the point of the router bit with the middle of the ply. The positive V will be cut into the solid wood edging.

Cutting mated hardwood banding for V-groove
Cut

The strips for the solid edging need to be the thickness you want exposed (1/4″ here) plus 3/8″ which will be routed into a V-shape and glued into the plywood. The width of the solid wood strips should be just over 3/4″. I used a flush-trim bit to trim the hardwood flush with the plywood once it was glued and dry. When routing the matching V into the plywood, make sure the fence is aligned perfectly with the bearing of the bit.

Router set-up for cutting v-groove edge banding

These bits cut pretty clean, but don’t waiver the plywood at all. It will cut too much off of one side, which will leave a gap on that side and mess up the V-groove alignment. I recommend using a featherboard to apply pressure down on the plywood to stabilize those large pieces. Remember, you only get one shot at routing the plywood.

Test fitting hardwood edge banding on plywood panel

If you try to touch up the cut, the bit will damage the delicate veneer edges. And after routing the solid wood once, there won’t be enough surface left to handle it safely. When routing the banding, featherboards are necessary for downward and inward pressure. Use a push stick, do at least one practice piece, and let the router do the work.

Diagram for sizing of hardwood edge banding

During the tricky parts of this project, one may forget that this should be fun. I recommend keeping cookies on hand for said moments. Cookies can be more soothing than a freshly sharpened hand plane cutting its first ribbon of wood.

The Bed

Assembling the parts for Murphy bed hardware
The bed end is attached to the case side with the trunnion bushing. You can align the bed end in the perpendicular (desk) position and clamp it. Then mark where the curves will line up on the case side and the bed side.

The bed ends are rather tricky, just like the case ends. Now that you have practiced doing the curves for the case, the curves on this section should be easier. After routing the edge V-groove on the four parts of the sides shown, mark and drill for the trunnion bushing. Then attach the bed end to the case side with the trunnion bushing. You can align the bed end in the perpendicular (desk) position and clamp it. Then mark where the curves will line up on the case side and the bed side. Now remove the bed end.

Fitting Murphy bed top to desk base
The author had some extra-long clamps that came in very handy while assembling the case section of the desk/bed.

You are ready once again to go through the steps of making the curves — mark, cut, and rout the plywood, and then move the trammel arm. Mark, cut, and rout the solid edge. Glue the matching pieces as described in the case side curve. Mark the final dimension 1/4″ out from the plywood. Cut it leaving at least 1/16″ of extra wood. Move the trammel arm to the third hole. Clamp the bed end down and rout the curve again. I made this the same curve, but it is 1/4″ smaller than the case side curves. This still looks nice, and it takes the pressure off of counting on the curves lining up spot-on. Once you have completed the curves, glue on the edge treatments. You will need to rip 1/4″ pieces for the edges on each bed end, and you will also need to make the solid wood round pieces with edging. Fit these edges, miter them and glue them on. The clamping for the bed ends is a bit easier because they are smaller. Once all the edges have dried, been flush-trimmed with the router and sanded, then round the corner where the link pivot goes, using a jigsaw or the band saw.

Using Festool Domino on bed frame joint
While the author used Dominos for her construction, biscuits would work, too. Use the best solution you have at hand.

Next, I ripped the bed rails and attached the edge banding using the edge V-groove and glue. Go ahead and chop Domino mortises into the bed rails and the ends of the bed. Glue the rails to the bed ends after sanding. Check for square by measuring corner to corner. Tweak the bed if needed. I used two giant clamps for this assembly. That allowed the middle of the bed to be open, so I went ahead and made the cleats out of solid wood and attached them. Use a countersink bit to pre-drill for the screws. Put screw covers over them later on, because the holes will be visible.

Attaching bed/desk top to bottom base
With scrap wood pieces securely clamped to both faces of the case sides, the author uses them to clamp down the top subassembly.

The next step (there are a lot of steps, aren’t there!) involved ripping and crosscutting the 1/4″ sheet stock for the bed bottom cover. Set this piece aside for now. When the bed is in use, you’ll never see the slats, so I used pine alternating with maple for the bed slats, which feature chamfered edges. I also pre-drilled the bed slats using a countersink bit so that the mattress won’t get snagged. For ease of finishing, I did not yet assemble the bed bottom cover or the bed slats.

Finishing/Assembly

Finished bed/desk combination project

Now you are ready to do the most difficult glue-up of the project. Go collect the case parts you set aside earlier and get your biggest clamps close at hand. I clamped the sides of the case to two tables so they wouldn’t fall over while I glued the back and bottom stretcher in place. I also put one of the two long clamps under the case to get the best pressure for the bottom stretcher, and put the other clamp across the back panel. This worked pretty well. All right, now attach the top of the case to the rest of the body with Dominos. I clamped solid strips to the plywood panel so I could get better clamping pressure on the glue-up of the case top to the sides/bottom.

Once I completed construction of the bed, desk and case, I finished sanding everything up to 180-grit. I usually go to at least 220-grit, but I think 180-grit is adequate for this project. Break all of the edges while sanding.

Now, you get to see the wood come alive! I used Watco® Danish Oil for the finish on this project. It is easy to use and protective enough for a bed/desk. Flood the surface with the first coat. Let it sit for about half an hour. I just let it sit long enough to move through the three sections and the bed bottom cover, which did take about 30 minutes. Then wipe everything down, going with the direction of the grain. After 24 hours, I put on another coat of the Watco Danish Oil, and then I wiped it off after going over all of the pieces. You will need to do this a total of five to six times to get a nice buildup of the finish.

Then you need someone to help you assemble. The hardware arms are much too strong for someone to do it by themselves, and the case is unsteady until you attach it to a wall. Start by attaching the bed bottom cover by pinning it between the bed slats and the cleats. Then attach the hardware to the base sides. Next, attach the bed to the desktop using the link pivot. Attach the bed ends to the case ends using the trunnion bushing. Now lift the bed and desktop up to attach the tri-bearer to the hardware arm. This is when you will most need someone to hold the bed and desk in the up position while you pull the arm down and under the tribearer. Move the whole contraption from the bed position to the desk position. It should work smoothly, but you’re not finished yet.

Now you can mark where to drill the holes in the upper and lower locking pin blocks for the nylon bushings that accept the safety locking pins. I marked where to drill these holes by tapping the safety pin into the locking pin block to leave a mark. Remove the locking pin blocks. Drill the holes on the drill press, and then reattach the locking pin blocks to the body case/concealers, and glue in the nylon bushings for the locking pins.

It’s almost time to make your bed and take a well-deserved nap! I disassembled the bed at this point for ease of moving it. Remember! You must anchor the bed/ desk to the wall! Finally, put the mattress in, strap it down using Velcro® straps, and you’re ready to take a load off.

Safety and Knockdown Advice

Let there be no confusion about this next point. This Murphy Bed/Desk absolutely needs to be anchored to the studs in a wall for stability and safety. Also, the techniques for this bed involve permanently gluing the case together. The finished case is just under 36″ wide. Please, keep this in mind when planning where you will install it. You don’t want to be disassembling door frames! There is an option to use confirmat screws to assemble the case sides, case top, bottom stretcher and case back, which would make this project somewhat “knockdown” in nature. If you choose to use confirmat screws, keep the number of times you assemble and disassemble the parts to an absolute minimum.

Well, there you have it. Hopefully you learned something, tried a new technique, or benefited from this project some other way. Now you can leave your work spread out on the desk, pull down your bed in a matter of moments, and take a snooze. Happy working/sleeping!

Download the Drawings and Materials List.

Hard to Find Hardware

Hiddenbed Twin Mechanism (1) #44833
Statuary Bronze Cap Nuts (8-pack) #31815
3/4″ Edge V-Groove Bit (Convex) (1) #40362
3/4″ Edge V-Groove Bit (Concave) (1) #40368

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PROJECT: Queen Anne Candlestand Table https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/project-queen-anne-candlestand-table/ Wed, 15 Feb 2017 20:51:55 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=35968 This candlestand is a lovely little table that will allow you to put your turning skills to good use. Its elegant design has stood the test of time.

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This candlestand is a lovely little table that will allow you to put your turning skills to good use. Its elegant design has stood the test of time.

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Making Bowl Blanks with a Chainsaw https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/make-bowl-blanks-chainsaw/ Fri, 14 Oct 2016 15:00:51 +0000 http://rocklerwj.wpengine.com/?p=33670 Harvest your own bowl blanks — with a chainsaw.

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Turning a bowl from kiln-dried wood is problematic due to the sparse availability of 4″ or thicker planks needed for a decent bowl. And if you do find some, expect to pay $14 or more a board foot. That’s why most turners turn green wood from blanks they chainsaw from freshly fallen logs. Historically, this was the way bowls were turned, so I don’t think our ancestors thought anything of a bowl being oval. That was the way it was supposed to look!

Many turners, myself included, keep the tradition alive by turning green wood bowls to final dimension and allowing them to warp oval. If this bothers you, it is only slightly more work to leave your bowl a bit thicker initially and allow it to dry for about three months. You then re-chuck your dried blank and make it round with a normal wall thickness in a second turning session.

chainsawing-bowl-blanks-3

As shown in the Drawing, a log does not shrink very much along the grain: only 0.1%. However, it shrinks up to 8% tangentially along the annular rings, and slightly more than 4% in the radial plane, which is at right angle to the annular rings. If left as a log, cracks (called checks by lumbermen), will soon appear. The nature of these cracks depends on the wood. One huge crack can appear in a wood like pine, while elm or beech will have a myriad of small cracks, as in the photo at right. The lumber industry deals with this by cutting logs into boards that do not have a complete annular ring. Think of it as the cardinal rule of the cardinal rules: leave no complete annular ring in your bowl blanks.

End Grain Checking: Because a log or a board loses water faster from the end grain than from the face, or plank, it’s normal to see grain checking at the exposed ends. The checking must be cut away.
End Grain Checking: Because a log or a board loses water faster from the end grain than from the face, or plank, it’s normal to see grain checking at the exposed ends. The checking must be cut away.

To do this, I will crosscut a section of log slightly shorter than my chainsaw bar — this is called “bucking” by tree cutters. Support this log on a cradle, which you can nail up from construction material or improvise from short sections of logs. Next, I’ll rip boards from the log section, after first ensuring that my chain is very sharp!

I rip down the middle first, but do not cut all the way through. I stop about 1″ to 2″ shy of the bottom. For a small log, I make a center rip, trying to cut through the center or pith of the tree. More specifically, for larger logs, I make two rips, one to each side of the center so as to completely eliminate the center of the log. I stop both cuts 1″ to 2″ shy of completion. Next, I rip planks of the desired thickness to either side of the center cut or cuts. On a smaller log, I will get two planks, but on a larger log I can get four or six planks. On larger logs, I work from the outside to the center.

With the checks cut away from the end of the log section and your properly sized log securely raised from the ground, begin the first cut.

I do enough of this type of work that I have a very powerful chainsaw: 70cc with a 25″ bar, what the manufacturer, Stihl, catalogues as “a saw for extraordinary cutting needs.” I can get two good-size bowls out of each plank I rip with this saw. The average home or farm duty saw will typically have a 12″ to 18″ bar so you will more likely yield one bowl per plank.

Continue your first cut across the width of the log, but leave an inch or two at the far end of the log uncut. A very sharp chain helps here!
With the checks cut away from the end of the log section and your properly sized log securely raised from the ground, begin the first cut.

After ripping the planks from my log, the next chore is to band saw a circle to create a blank. It’s straightforward, but you need a coarse blade. I use a wide, four-tooth, skip pattern that cuts very aggressively. You must now turn your freshly cut blank before it dries or store it in such a way that it will not dry out.

Next, completely cut away the outside waste from both sides of the log. (Note the piece on the ground on the near side in the photo.)
Continue your first cut across the width of the log, but leave an inch or two at the far end of the log uncut. A very sharp chain helps here!

This brings a second caveat to wood drying — the elastic limit of the material. If I bend a thin strip of wood, it will bend a good deal before breaking. A thicker strip will not bend nearly as much. I’m dealing with very thick planks here, and they will almost certainly check during drying if left as is. But if I turn a freshly minted blank to a bowl with a reasonably thin wall, the wood will be able to bend much more readily as it dries. A good rule of thumb is the wall needs to be 10% of the bowl diameter, or less. This means that a 10″ bowl needs a 1″ wall to survive drying. If you want to turn your bowl a second time after drying oval to achieve a round vessel, 10% gives sufficient wall thickness to do so.

Next, completely cut away the outside waste from both sides of the log. (Note the piece on the ground on the near side in the photo.)
Next, completely cut away the outside waste from both sides of the log. (Note the piece on the ground on the near side in the photo.)

If you want round bowls, turn your blank to a 10% wall thickness and let it dry for about three months. Wrapping it in several sheets of newspaper, or a brown paper bag, for the first month further reduces checking because the end grain loses water faster than the plank grain. The paper creates a sufficient vapor barrier to equalize this. If tomorrow is someone’s birthday, you can dry the wood rapidly in a microwave. Directions abound on the Internet for microwave drying — but I just wait three months. I have a big pile of blanks drying — handy.

With the two outside waste pieces sliced away, complete the center cut, and you have two thick planks from which you can remove bowl blanks.
With the two outside waste pieces sliced away, complete the center cut, and you have two thick planks from which you can remove bowl blanks.

More often than not, I simply turn the bowl to a pleasing wall thickness. I then sand it and apply an oil or an epoxy finish. The finish creates a vapor barrier and does the same thing as newspaper. The bowl dries oval over the succeeding week, but it is just as useful as its round cousin.

Chainsaw Safety

VIDEO: Cutting Bowl Blanks Safely with a Chain Saw

1. Never use a chainsaw lefthanded. It is a right-handed tool only.

2. A chainsaw is only to be used by one person at a time. All observers should stay a good distance away.

3. Never use a chainsaw alone.

4. Never use a chainsaw above your shoulders or on a ladder.

5. Always ensure that the chain is tight before starting work and check it frequently.

6. Make sure your chain is sharp — a dull chain is more prone to accidents.

7. Always cut at a high throttle setting. Cutting at partial throttle is more prone to kickback.

8. Use a ground start or a knee start — never a cowboy start.

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Techniques for Making a Candlestand Table https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/techniques-making-candlestand-table/ Fri, 20 Dec 2013 21:16:34 +0000 http://wwj-dev.windmilldesignworks.net/?p=2593 Ernie Conover expands on his project from the January/February 2014 issue of Woodworker's Journal Magazine, showing off some techniques for creating a stunning, turned table.

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Ernie Conover expands on his project from the January/February 2014 issue of Woodworker’s Journal Magazine, showing off some techniques for creating a stunning, turned table.

Ernie covered using paper glue joints for projects like this for us in the past. Here is the video that explains how to incorporate those into your turning.

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Swing Out Panel Storage https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/swing-panel-storage/ Fri, 20 Dec 2013 21:13:24 +0000 http://wwj-dev.windmilldesignworks.net/?p=2590 Having trouble finding a good place to keep large panels and pieces of scrap in your workshop? Chris Marshall may have just the solution for you.

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Having trouble finding a good place to keep large panels and pieces of scrap in your workshop? Chris Marshall may have just the solution for you.

The post Swing Out Panel Storage appeared first on Woodworking | Blog | Videos | Plans | How To.

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Ready2Rout Router Table Fence https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/2586/ Fri, 20 Dec 2013 21:09:12 +0000 http://wwj-dev.windmilldesignworks.net/?p=2586 Our friends at Rockler recorded a video explaining the features of the Ready2Rout Router Table Fence that was featured in the January/February 2014 issue of our magazine.

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Our friends at Rockler recorded a video explaining the features of the Ready2Rout Router Table Fence that was featured in the January/February 2014 issue of our magazine. 

Spend less time tediously adjusting your fence, and more time producing in the shop! With computer-controlled precision, repeatable fence settings stored in memory, a pre-installed suite of apps, and many more to come, this first-ever electronic router fence ushers the humble router table into the “smart” era. Woodworkers used to endlessly tapping and bumping their fences will appreciate the ease and simplicity of pressing only a few buttons to dial in a setting.

For more information, visit Rockler.com.

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Convertible Bed/Desk https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/convertible-beddesk/ Fri, 20 Dec 2013 21:05:23 +0000 http://wwj-dev.windmilldesignworks.net/?p=2582 Rob Johnstone explores the features of the convertible bed and desk project featured in the January/February 2014 issue of Woodworker's Journal Magazine.

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Rob Johnstone explores the features of the convertible bed and desk project featured in the January/February 2014 issue of Woodworker’s Journal Magazine.

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Computers in the Workshop https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/computers-workshop/ Fri, 20 Dec 2013 21:01:26 +0000 http://wwj-dev.windmilldesignworks.net/?p=2579 We've put together a list of some of the computer software, websites and tools that Sandor Nagyszalanczy suggests for a high-tech workshop.

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In our Jan/Feb 2014 issue, Sandor Nagyszalanczy gave a tour of some of the computer programs, websites and tools that are starting to help us out around the shop.

We’ve compiled a list of the tools that Sandor suggested in the article (and a few others) with handy links to learn more about what they can do for your woodworking.

You can find the list in PDF format at this link.

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Chainsawing Bowl Blanks https://www.woodworkersjournal.com/chainsawing-bowl-blanks/ Fri, 20 Dec 2013 20:54:48 +0000 http://wwj-dev.windmilldesignworks.net/?p=2576 Turning expert Ernie Conover offers some handy safety tips for creating your own turning stock from logs with a chainsaw.

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Turning expert Ernie Conover offers some handy safety tips for creating your own turning stock from logs with a chainsaw.

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