Thanks, Bill. Yes, my father bestowed upon me the gift of knowing which
side of the soldering iron to grab so being somewhat handy with tools makes
that 'instantiating' possible and fulfilling. Oh, and I have a whole other
workbench below all my tools that loves to accumulate bits. Horizontal
s
The bottle is there to occasionally hold a flower or two from the garden
outside the shop. Mounted there so it doesn't take up space on the table
top.
Cheers.
On Thursday, August 26, 2021 at 11:40:12 PM UTC+9 cycli...@gmail.com wrote:
> I like it! What purpose does the glass bottle mounted to
Copy away, Brendon! I believe Picasso said, 'All great artists steal' so
there's definitely no shame to be had.
Cheers,John
On Thursday, August 26, 2021 at 9:15:27 PM UTC+9 brendonoid wrote:
> This is such a great piece of DIY I plan to shamelessly copy!
>
> On Thursday, 26 August 2021 at 19:57
That is so nicely done John. You've created what looks like a therapeutic
workspace too. I'm with you on the DIY Riv ethos which for me includes all
things bicycle and much more. Thank you for sharing your handiwork.
Best,
Rich in ATL
On Thursday, August 26, 2021 at 10:40:12 AM UTC-4 cycli...@g
I like it! What purpose does the glass bottle mounted to the right leg of
the table serve? Just curious. I like the spoke holders too. Quite an
efficient set-up.
On Thursday, August 26, 2021 at 5:37:33 AM UTC-7 Bill Lindsay wrote:
> I like the jig. Just the act of instantiating a first re
I like it!
On Thursday, August 26, 2021 at 5:37:33 AM UTC-7 Bill Lindsay wrote:
> I like the jig. Just the act of instantiating a first revision out of
> one's head can be super fulfilling. I confess the aspect of the photo that
> makes me the most jealous is your tidy work surface. I need t
I like the jig. Just the act of instantiating a first revision out of
one's head can be super fulfilling. I confess the aspect of the photo that
makes me the most jealous is your tidy work surface. I need to do a little
bit more tidying, and less accumulation of bits...
add it to the list...
This is such a great piece of DIY I plan to shamelessly copy!
On Thursday, 26 August 2021 at 19:57:32 UTC+8 John Rinker wrote:
> Brendon,
>
> Here's another angle on the jig. Not sure it shows too much more.
> [image: IMG_7098.jpeg]
>
> On Thursday, August 26, 2021 at 8:52:48 PM UTC+9 John Rinke
Hey Brendon,
The arms with wheel braces are spring-loaded to open easily and hold the
rim in place, and the rim runs on two tiny wheels on each brace. The hub
support is 3 pieces of 1 x 4 laminated together and then sanded to a taper
with a threaded rod onto which I slide the hub. As you can se
Hey Eric,
The hub support wasn't turned but run on a belt sander clamped upside down
to a sawhorse (Wish I had a lathe!). The shelves are bombproof and have
them all over my shop, and the woodstove works just fine though not in
summer so I can rearrange my shop. The table with the jig and the t
This is really neat. I think I get how this works but can you give us a
little explanation of your design ideas and its functionality/problems?
Thanks for sharing!
On Thursday, 26 August 2021 at 18:35:12 UTC+8 John Rinker wrote:
> I don't know, there's something about the intersection of Rivend
Nice jig you've got there. Is the center hub support turned? I see it
tapers upward.
I dig those Wandel-style shelves in the background. I've built a lot of
them, some for our warehouse and others for hardwood storage.
And I'm into shops so I'm looking at everything — looks like the wood stov
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