OK FRIENDS! This is what I came up with this past week.
Man...I have to tell you guys...making mistakes ****! But it does feel great to learn from them! I'm going to admit this up front. This is my first EVER woodworking project. I've never built anything myself so I KNEW and EXPECTED I was going to make mistakes. Some of you may read though this and be like "well that's stupid, why did he do that? Then you may continue reading on and then see how I started picking up on my mistakes. HOWEVER, there are problems I still have and any input anyone has would be cool and I welcome your input.
So my friend's old little Toyota Tacoma pickup managed to bring home five 4x8 sheets of 3/4 red oak plywood and also a 4x8 of styrofoam so I can do all my cutting. *****, I did all my cutting on the ground of my garage. Sure...I could have bought a pair of saw horses, but I was being cheap and didn't want to spend anymore money. This project for 2 light duty storage cabinets/work space bench things has cost me almost $1000. $200 in plywood, $100 in various tools / accessories, $340 for Makita track saw, $125 for Festool guide rail, $200 Makita 18v Li drill set, $40 KREG Jig. Anyway, trying not to think about that.
Just as a reminder, I went through so many designs and I ended up just building it like this. Sorry, no fancy rabbets or lap joints or whatevers. Just edge to face and pocket screws.
So here's where it all started...
Making my cuts...do you see the problem?
One of the members earlier mentioned how fast mistakes compound and boy did they compound exponentially! I should have been cutting TWO sheets at a time because for most of the project, I needed almost two of everything! But I was cutting the top piece in one cut, then the bottom piece in the next, and then making separate cuts for all my vertical panels...wha? Man that was dumb.
I looked at all the wood and was like...hmmm...I'm not sure if this thing is square?!?!??!
Sorry for the shallow depth of field but...
Wait! The T-Square must be off!!!!! (This T-Square has probably been in our family for 20 years, who knows!). OK LETS GO OUT AND BUY A NEW ONE!
Oh ****...I guess it is off?!?!?!
OK. Let's just cut it off then?
Much of the project kept going on like this. I kept finding mistake after mistake. As I corrected it, it made them worst. Oh man, this sucked.
Moving along, I learned that I made way too many pocket screw holes...It wasn't really necessary to make it any stronger.
In the end...this is what I came up with and this is how it's being used.
Behind the air compressor and shop vac are problems like this...and they're ALL OVER!
Many of you will say....wha? $1000 and that's all he got? Well...yeah. It was a pretty expensive cabinet bench or whatever thing, but you know, it fits what I wanted to put in there perfectly and I'm glad I built it because I learned so much. I now have some what of a flat surface to do SOMETHING on. Or maybe just put more stuff on top of it. That seems to be the cool thing GJ members do to their work space. I also built that miter saw floating box next to the left.
After using the Makita track saw, I realized how bad *** it is to cut wood and not have a gazillion pieces of dust flying all over so that Ryobi Miter saw will probably be gone by the end of the year. I'm just gonna drop the cash and buy the Festool Kapex Miter saw. All the videos I've seen, it ***** up so much of the dust it's amazing.
I still have to add the shelf to the first cabinet/bench. Also, I'm going to paint it, I just don't know what color yet...
Well...on to the next project! I gotta get rid of all this wood so I can move my daily driver back into the garage. Hopefully I'll use something I learned this time around...
So this time around, I took two 4x8 sheets and stacked them so that I can cut out two pieces at a time.
This time around, instead of using a small 6" speed square, I went out and bought a 12" square...looks like this one will come together nicer?
I still have some more pieces to add and also the separators for the drawers I plan on making a total of 8 pull out drawers for the two smaller 10" wide spaces. I'll probably either put this on leveling feet or caster wheels. I don't know yet...
This 2nd cabinet seems to have gone together much nicer, but I still have some problems. I managed to hide some of it on the back but not all of it. I seem to be off 1mm to 2mm and it *****
Some corners come together a lot better!
So...the obviously things I learned. Measure twice, cut once. Always cut from the same side (either on the line, or to right/left of the line, etc, but always staying consistent. So with these things being off by 1mm to 2mm, what do I do?
Part of me thinks / wants to think, that since I need to do repetitive cuts, I should buy the Festool Parallel Guides?
Or maybe I should get the Festool MFT/3?
Before all this, I read through Sakurama's thread on his whole home renovation (all the Festool **** he has), also just watching videos all over the interweb and obviously people aren't having these problems! Also went through lilscorpion's entire thread on tool organization as well. So I'm trying to learn how to get more accurate cuts... I believe Sakurama used only a track saw, parallel guides, and a MFT/3 table. I don't think he had a table saw....but obviously he's got 1000000000x more mad skills than I do, but I'm just trying to learn.
I don't have a table saw and I just don't have the room to have one so that's sorta out of the question at this time. I know in the future it will be nice to have to do dado and lap joints, etc but right now, I can't.
UGH...I'm not sure more tools is going to fix the problem, though it might make things much easier?!