Had some QST today. I got started trimming out the walk through door on the shop addition. Going to trim it in red oak. It weathers well, and I have lots of it, and it holds screws very well, making for a secure door mounting.
This is one stash of oak in the mezzanine of the shop:
It had been stacked and stickered neatly, but I have sold some and restacked some to get boards out. I've found several quarter sawn boards, and I won't sell them, so the stack has gotten messier. More messy. Cluttered.
There's a stack of cedar and old yellow pine there too.
I pulled out five boards. These are rough sawn red oak from a tree my neighbor cut down on my side of the fence. He asked me about it first, concerned it would fall on the fence. It was in good shape, but he was rebuilding the fence and cutting it later would mean fixing the fence again. I think he just wanted to cut a tree.
It was 42" at the stump, and my friend's sawmill will only cut 36" so I had to split the bottom 9 ft section with wedges. Then I borrowed his sawmill and cut it up in the woods. It was stickered outside for two years, then moved to the mezzanine about six years ago. It's good and dry.
Thought I would detail turning this board from rough sawn to finished lumber.
First establish a straight edge that gives the most lumber from the board. I did this with a chalk line.
This is the view from the other end, to see that the board angles underneath at this end.
I cut along the line freehand on the table saw. This is not recommended, however I have an old Craftsman table saw and it will stall in a bind instead of hurting me. I don't want a high powered one. This saw is safe for me, and I have it set up to cut square and clean.
After establishing the straight side, the next step is to plane. My planer is in a 20 ft nominal room so unless I move it, 9 ft is about as long as I can plane. These boards happen to be about 8' 10" long. Here's the view of the board clearing the wall just as I'm starting to plane.
Here's the planer
And the board as it is just out of the planer.
A couple of inches to spare.
12" planer, 11" board.
After the board is planed both sides, needed to trim a rotted spot from one end
And cut two boards from it for the top of the door and one of the windows.
Then edge joint the straight side.
Jointing the edge allows for a good rip to width next.
The board yielded the two boards mentioned with end pieces (on the right) with rot spots and two trim pieces on the left. Typical waste from a rough sawn board.
The next board has quite a twist. Planing it will result in a planed, twisted board. So it needs to be face jointed. My planer is convertable to a 12" jointer. It only takes a minute to convert but it seems like forever when you're doing it.
Outfeed table down, infeed table still up (right)
Both tables down and locked and fence in place.
After a couple of jointing passes, you can see the planed areas.
This is quarter sawn, you can see the flecks after it is planed.
After one side is flat, the planer is converted back to planing action and the other side is planed to be parallel with the jointed side. This is after a couple of planing passes.
Then I set up and varnished the three top pieces
in the paint booth. Where else?
After a little more work, the sides of the door frame and both sides of both windows are planed, trimmed, and ready to cut to length and finish.
Thanks for looking in!