I feel like my garage has turned into Santa's workshop... minus all of the little helper elves...
So this giant jenga(s) has been probably the most time consuming project to date....
My biggest mistake was not doing more research on the wood before I walked into the store. I explained what I was doing to the guy at Home Depot and he told me to use the stud wood that was onsale and I knew I should have gotten something a little nicer but he laughed and said I was making more work for myself. So I guess for wood that is made to be blocks and fall down what could go wrong?
The wood i got is complete garbage and should only be used as firewood. In fact I would like to go find one of these types of trees and punch it or at least let my dog piss on it.
Anyways it has lots of holes and pressure marks on it from the straps that held it into piles and splinters at the very touch...so I thought 1 light sanding would do it, then cut it and stain and poly... Yeah right. so I tried to start at 120 grit(highest grit Home Depot carries for my belt sander) then the plan was to do a quick final sanding after it was cut on my orbital sander at 220 and call it a day... Well the wood is so brittle that it destroyed about $20 worth of sandpaper in the first hour tearing it apart... So I had to jump down to 50 then 80 then finally to get it back to semi smooth I could use 120...
And all this fun sanding burned up my little skills orbital sander... Which ***** cause I bought it a few years back and never used it and this job was too much for it... But i bought it before my GJ days so I didn't read multiple reviews and get the smart guys feedback on it. So I went old school and did a few blocks by hand sanding them then I said F this and ran out and got a new one so at least this project meant that I was allowed to get a new tool out of it! Although I wish I could have gotten a large table sander with a billion amps to be done already but this wedding budget is cutting Into my tool budget.
So here's pics
Started by doing 1 board at a time.
Then got tired at how long it was taking so got out the pipe clamps to streamline it
Then made the cuts (too soon should have done all the sanding while they were nice long pieces of wood but I thought they were smooth enough)
Then I had to invent a new tool for sanding the bevels into the wood... (I'll be contacting SWAG off road to see if they want to market my design.)
Went old school for about 20mins too long
Picked up new one
And now I have this many left to finish today.
I say it a lot but I'll say it again I hate wood... It doesn't speak to me. It's also the mess that it leaves behind everything is covered in saw dust. If it was up to me I would have welded up all 110 blocks that would have been amazing practice time under the hood.
Ok done venting about this but it's been a long week to do what should have been an easy project if I would have spent a few more dollars on the right kind of wood.
So I have to sand like 30 more blocks at 120 then sand them all again at 220... then wipe them all clean then lay them out to stain them and then poly them...
Not sure how I'm going to lay out 110 blocks to stain and poly? Or what I should set them on to be able to cover both sides and have them dry? Maybe 110 baby blocks? Any ideas are always welcomed!
Thanks for looking!
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