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    <title>Kirk's Blog at LumberJocks.com</title>
    <link>http://lumberjocks.com/Kirk/blog</link>
    <pubDate>Fri, 24 Jul 2009 00:13:11 GMT</pubDate>
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      <title>Things that just happen, break. #2: Where do you store your 'dowels'?</title>
      <link>http://lumberjocks.com/Kirk/blog/10184</link>
      <description>
        <![CDATA[<p>Greetings,</p>


	<p>I have been storing my dowels in a 6&#8221;x24&#8221; paper tube stored in a garbage can.  The garbage can collect everything from electrical box plugs, batteries, scrap brass or copper, waterheater burner, bent nails.</p>


	<p>The problem came to light when I knew I had a length of dowel but I couldn&#8217;t reach it.  For a long time, I have thought about storing my dowels in a piece of gutter.  So I built one, 5&#8217; with ends.  I haven&#8217;t put on a lid just yet, but that will come in time.</p>


	<p>What has come to mind, where to place it?  I would like to put on the wall, but you need to get close to see what is laying in the bottom corner.  With benches around almost all walls there isn&#8217;t much room to look over the bench.  I am think about some pull down method, where it sits flush with wall and when I need grab hold of it and pull down and close to me.  A couple of linkages should make it work.</p>


	<p>So how do you keep your dowel?  I know about the people who store there in the ceiling joist of there basement workshop.  I have though about a PVC tube with an opening near the bottom.  Just looking of ideas.  If your is good find some magazine to tell and you might win something.  Just a thought.</p>


	<p>W. Kirk Crawford<br />Tularosa, New Mexico</p>]]>
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      <pubDate>Fri, 24 Jul 2009 00:13:11 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>http://lumberjocks.com/Kirk/blog/10184</guid>
      <author>Kirk</author>
      <dc:creator>Kirk</dc:creator>
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      <title>Things that just happen, break. #1: If I touch it, will it break?</title>
      <link>http://lumberjocks.com/Kirk/blog/1640</link>
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        <![CDATA[<p>After building the workbench I ended up with a 3/16&#8221; dip on one of the long sides.  Being a designer in the auto manufacturing world, I thought I need something that I could us my router to hover over the surface and take off that amount.  That would make it flat.  But what kind of a machine would I have to build?</p>


	<p>I thought about barn door hangers and its tracks.  But that I didn’t feel comfortable.  I even thought about using ¼” wall 3” square tubing.  But that would be more money that I wanted to spend, and what would I do with it after I was done with it.  Besides, my wife might not like that idea.</p>


	<p>Well, while I was at the store, Lowes or was it Home Depot, I was walking by the tools.  I look down and saw a #3 Stanley Bench Plane.  So I bought it.  Great, so I thought.</p>


	<p>I come from a family that had the first black smith shop in our small town.  We even had some old antique tools.  One was an 18” bench plane.  But that got lost in the move out here.  Every time I used a plane I would end up with a dip.  Nothing was ever flat.  Oh yes, and if I didn’t plane with the grain, chip outs.</p>


	<p>With all that in mind, I raised the blade just ever so slightly above the sole.  Shavings were very thin.  Just the setting I thought I wanted.  Perfect.  But with grain going both directions, planning with the grain wasn’t the answer.  So across the grain I went.  Talk about chip out, it looked like milled or rough cut.</p>


	<p>Now another thing happened to me.  I went to adjust the blade on the plane, the adjustment yoke broke.  Pot metal you see.  Hop on the computer and check out Stanley.com and believe it or not they had a replacement.  When I received it, it wasn’t pot metal, it was stamped steel riveted together and a new roll pin.</p>


	<p>What had I done?  Besides, this planning thing is too slow.</p>


	<p>Enter eBay.com and look for a power planner.  Right?  Well I thought I would find one of those like I saw at the store.  I saw one for $9.50.  I put in a bid of $9.95 and won.  Great, right?  <br />Wrong.  First the tool didn’t have a UL listing.  And the brand name, ‘America’s Favorite Power Tool’.  Not what I expected.  That wasn’t all either.  When I sighted down the sole plate, the blade was twisted by what I found out to be 0.035”.  Out here, finding shim stock isn’t easy, after visiting seven places, I got some.  Now that worked but the blade hung below the sole plate by 0.010” or less.  Now it is working.<br />Well after checking with my four foot level and finding the high spots and knot them down one way or another I got it to less than 1/64” anywhere.  Now was the time to bring out the sanders.  One for each hand, right?</p>


	<p>This bench isn’t a work of art, nor is it something that won’t things dropped on it.  Heck, a pencil leaves a small groove.  I still have to deal with the ends that got chopped up by my planner.  The in and out feed tables not on the same level, causing chopping about 8” from the end.<br />I wander what else I can break?</p>]]>
      </description>
      <pubDate>Sun, 05 Aug 2007 00:13:27 GMT</pubDate>
      <guid>http://lumberjocks.com/Kirk/blog/1640</guid>
      <author>Kirk</author>
      <dc:creator>Kirk</dc:creator>
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