I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where floating
tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect all other
pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and side
panels.
No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
"Leon" wrote:
> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>
> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where
> floating
> tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect all
> other
> pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and
> side
> panels.
>
> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles,
> door
> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main
> cabinet.
SHOW OFF!!!
BTW, nicely done.
Lew
evodawg <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> Leon wrote:
>
>> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>>
>> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where
>> floating tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to
>> connect all other pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts.
>> door fronts, and side panels.
>>
>> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles,
>> door hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main
>> cabinet.
> Not to be a pain in the ass but could someone post these pics on
> something like "photobucket" or something similar. I can't get abpw
> through my server.
> Thanks
Have a look here:
http://www.usenet-
replayer.com/groups/alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking.html
It was the first result on Google for
"alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking". You may find other sites you like
better.
Puckdropper
--
"The potential difference between the top and bottom of a tree is the
reason why all trees have to be grounded..." -- Bored Borg on
rec.woodworking
To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm
"Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> Just you wait till I up load my 181 Gigabite detail shot of the
> special hinge I used. LOL
>
>
>
My quick calculations show that would take 36 days at a very generous
upload speed of 512kb/s. Thanks for getting me to pull my calculator out
and change the batteries, though. One had just started to leak.
Puckdropper
--
"The potential difference between the top and bottom of a tree is the
reason why all trees have to be grounded..." -- Bored Borg on
rec.woodworking
To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm
<[email protected]> wrote:
> alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking
>
> scorn, derision and all that other stuff...
> Just so you know, binary newsgroups aren't viewable through Google
> so
> you'll have to search out a different server or source if you want
> to
> view those images.
SFWIW:
Astraweb is serving me well.
Based on my usage so far, the 180G for $25 package should last me
about 50 years, so there is little chance I'll use it all.
Lew
On Oct 14, 11:52=A0pm, Hoosierpopi <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Oct 13, 7:16=A0pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>
> a b p w - What is that? For one, I would prefer a link. I realize
> everyone else knows about a p b w and fully expect scorn a derision,
> but thought to make the observation regardless. (;
Yea, Leon... get yourself a Photobucket account..free/cheap/easy.
"Kevin" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 10:47:19 -0700 (PDT), "[email protected]"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Very nicely done, Leon. Nice indeed.
>>
>>And like "r" said, you are making some of us look a little bad.
>
> Yeah but, he has to move them into the bedroom, so there!
>
>
> -Kevin
Go take a look at Moving Day for the Towers in a.p.b.w. ;~0
On Oct 13, 7:16=A0pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
a b p w - What is that? For one, I would prefer a link. I realize
everyone else knows about a p b w and fully expect scorn a derision,
but thought to make the observation regardless. (;
"Robatoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
On Oct 13, 7:16 pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>
> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where floating
> tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect all other
> pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and side
> panels.
>
> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
Superb fit and finish. You're making a lot of us look bad. *S*
Thank you sir, there are a couple of tweaks I need on the doors, they don't
shut where I think they should but I can fix and live with that. :!)
"Lew Hodgett" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> SFWIW:
>
> Astraweb is serving me well.
>
> Based on my usage so far, the 180G for $25 package should last me about 50
> years, so there is little chance I'll use it all.
>
> Lew
>
>
>
Just you wait till I up load my 181 Gigabite detail shot of the special
hinge I used. LOL
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:f6538282-71c1-4eb9-a91f-7e97f6f33561@k19g2000yqc.googlegroups.com...
> Very nicely done, Leon. Nice indeed.
Thank you Robert.
>
> And like "r" said, you are making some of us look a little bad.
Well they are not perfect but I like the over all effect. ;~) I like all
the shadow lines.
>
> Please tell me that was for a client, and not for you. I always tell
> Kathy it is cheaper to go to a good furniture store!
OK, they are for a client. NOT! Sorry, they are for us.
>
> And I must say... I don't think there is anyone that has put their
> Domino to more frequent or good use. When you use it like you do, the
> price of the tool seems very affordable.
If nothing else it has paid for it self in saved time. And I don't hesitate
used a mortise and loose tennon any more.
>
> Once again, nice work.
Thank you again rovert, I appreciate your kind words.
>
> P.S.: If this is in your house, be kind to your friends (not Swing -
> he can defend himself in these matters! ;^) ) and don't tell their
> respective significant others you made the towers yourself. I can see
> potential problems for many, many weekends for other woodworkers!
I have to tell them and my neighbors, thay are my customer base. LOL.
"evodawg" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Guess you can lead an old ass to water but you can't make him drink. :)
> Doubt the generalization above holds true with "most"....
I'd say the generalization probably hold true to most. a.b.p.w. was pretty
much deserted 6-8 months ago. Now today, I see almost as much traffic as I
did a couple years ago.
"Puckdropper" <puckdropper(at)yahoo(dot)com> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in
> news:[email protected]:
>
>> Just you wait till I up load my 181 Gigabite detail shot of the
>> special hinge I used. LOL
>>
>>
>>
>
> My quick calculations show that would take 36 days at a very generous
> upload speed of 512kb/s. Thanks for getting me to pull my calculator out
> and change the batteries, though. One had just started to leak.
I dont't know about that, LOL.
Quarterly I update my Garmin GPS and "down load" a 1.8 GB file in about 2.5
hours. If my up load speed was only 1/10 of that speed, .18 GB per hour it
would take 1005 hours or 41 days. LOL
I am not running at "generous speed".
"Tanus" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:[email protected]...
>>
>> Superb fit and finish. You're making a lot of us look bad. *S*
>
> You're making some of us look bad, and some look terrible.
>
> Lovely work, sir.
>
> Tanus
Thank you, you are tooooo kind. ;~)
"Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>
> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where
> floating tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect
> all other pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and
> side panels.
>
> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
>
>
>
First class! : )
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:16:46 -0500, "Leon" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
Thank you !
Can I assume most if not all of those floating tenons
> were Domino cut and installed?
Well the domino cut the mortises, "I" glued and slid the domino tennons in.
;!)
If so, I was wondering how strong a
> joint you get on a 90? joint with 3/4" plywood? I'm asking about
> pulling the joints apart, not flexing the 90? join to break the
> tenons.
90 degrees? I suspect very strong. I dont want to do it as I use the
smallest 5mm x 30mm Domino tennons on every thing including the face frame
on the front, I think I could stand on the rails. there are 4, 3/4"
plywood fixed shelves from top to bottom. 2 tennons in each side of each
shelf. The towers were very ridgid with the hollow front and back panels.
>
> After all, you're cutting a mortise for a floating tenon that's less
> than 3/4" deep. Obviously, you don't want to blast through the
> plywood. I think I read it was something like 9/16" deep. Have you
> done any personal testing in this area?
In this project all of the tennons mortises and tennons were in the edge of
the 3/4" plywood. No testing done but there are much larger tennons 10mm
thick and about 50mm long. Those should suffice on most any furniture
project. either way I'd feel comfortable in saying much stronger than a
biscuit and stronger than a pocket hole and screw.
"Robatoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
On Oct 14, 11:52 pm, Hoosierpopi <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Oct 13, 7:16 pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>
> a b p w - What is that? For one, I would prefer a link. I realize
> everyone else knows about a p b w and fully expect scorn a derision,
> but thought to make the observation regardless. (;
Yea, Leon... get yourself a Photobucket account..free/cheap/easy.
Still free/cheaper/easier for me is if every one would finally upgrade to a
decent news server, or what ever, like most every one has done with broad
band. LOL
On Oct 13, 7:16=A0pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>
> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. =A0Where floa=
ting
> tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect all othe=
r
> pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and side
> panels.
>
> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
Superb fit and finish. You're making a lot of us look bad. *S*
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 20:52:52 -0700 (PDT), Hoosierpopi
<[email protected]> wrote:
>a b p w - What is that? For one, I would prefer a link. I realize
>everyone else knows about a p b w and fully expect scorn a derision,
>but thought to make the observation regardless. (;
alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking
scorn, derision and all that other stuff...
Just so you know, binary newsgroups aren't viewable through Google so
you'll have to search out a different server or source if you want to
view those images.
Very nicely done, Leon. Nice indeed.
And like "r" said, you are making some of us look a little bad.
Please tell me that was for a client, and not for you. I always tell
Kathy it is cheaper to go to a good furniture store!
And I must say... I don't think there is anyone that has put their
Domino to more frequent or good use. When you use it like you do, the
price of the tool seems very affordable.
Once again, nice work.
P.S.: If this is in your house, be kind to your friends (not Swing -
he can defend himself in these matters! ;^) ) and don't tell their
respective significant others you made the towers yourself. I can see
potential problems for many, many weekends for other woodworkers!
Robert
On Wed, 14 Oct 2009 10:47:19 -0700 (PDT), "[email protected]"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Very nicely done, Leon. Nice indeed.
>
>And like "r" said, you are making some of us look a little bad.
Yeah but, he has to move them into the bedroom, so there!
-Kevin
Leon wrote:
> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>
> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where
> floating tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect
> all other pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and
> side panels.
>
> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
Not to be a pain in the ass but could someone post these pics on something
like "photobucket" or something similar. I can't get abpw through my
server.
Thanks
--
"You can lead them to LINUX
but you can't make them THINK"
Running Mandriva release 2008.0 free-i586 using KDE on i586
Website Address http://rentmyhusband.biz/
Robatoy wrote:
> On Oct 13, 7:16 pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>>
>> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where floating
>> tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect all other
>> pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and side
>> panels.
>>
>> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
>> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
>
> Superb fit and finish. You're making a lot of us look bad. *S*
You're making some of us look bad, and some look terrible.
Lovely work, sir.
Tanus
Puckdropper <puckdropper(at)yahoo(dot)com> wrote:
> evodawg <[email protected]> wrote in
> news:[email protected]:
>
>> Leon wrote:
>>
>>> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>>>
>>> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where
>>> floating tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to
>>> connect all other pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts.
>>> door fronts, and side panels.
>>>
>>> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles,
>>> door hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main
>>> cabinet.
>> Not to be a pain in the ass but could someone post these pics on
>> something like "photobucket" or something similar. I can't get abpw
>> through my server.
>> Thanks
>
> Have a look here:
> http://www.usenet-
> replayer.com/groups/alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking.html
>
> It was the first result on Google for
> "alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking". You may find other sites you like
> better.
>
> Puckdropper
Thanks again
--
"You can lead them to LINUX
but you can't make them THINK"
Running Mandriva release 2008.0 free-i586 using KDE on i586
Website Address http://rentmyhusband.biz/
Leon wrote:
>
> "Robatoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> On Oct 14, 11:52 pm, Hoosierpopi <[email protected]> wrote:
>> On Oct 13, 7:16 pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> > I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>>
>> a b p w - What is that? For one, I would prefer a link. I realize
>> everyone else knows about a p b w and fully expect scorn a derision,
>> but thought to make the observation regardless. (;
>
> Yea, Leon... get yourself a Photobucket account..free/cheap/easy.
>
> Still free/cheaper/easier for me is if every one would finally upgrade to
> a decent news server, or what ever, like most every one has done with
> broad
> band. LOL
Guess you can lead an old ass to water but you can't make him drink. :)
Doubt the generalization above holds true with "most"....
--
"You can lead them to LINUX
but you can't make them THINK"
Running Mandriva release 2008.0 free-i586 using KDE on i586
Website Address http://rentmyhusband.biz/
Robatoy wrote:
>>> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>> a b p w - What is that? For one, I would prefer a link. I realize
>> everyone else knows about a p b w and fully expect scorn a derision,
>> but thought to make the observation regardless. (;
>
> Yea, Leon... get yourself a Photobucket account..free/cheap/easy.
I second that.
--
-MIKE-
"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com
[email protected]
---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply
On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:45:22 -0500, "Leon" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I'd say the generalization probably hold true to most. a.b.p.w. was pretty
>much deserted 6-8 months ago. Now today, I see almost as much traffic as I
>did a couple years ago.
I'd say that's mostly because it was approximately a year ago that
many ISP's started dropping usenet access and in particular, binary
newsgroups. The more recent amount of postings probably means that
many of those who lost that service have finally gotten around to
finding other means of accessing a.b.p.w.
"Lew Hodgett" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Leon" wrote:
>
>> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>>
>> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where
>> floating
>> tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect all
>> other
>> pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts, and side
>> panels.
>>
>> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
>> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
>
>
> SHOW OFF!!!
LOL!
>
> BTW, nicely done.
Thank you Lew.
>
> Lew
>
>
>
"diggerop" <toobusy@themoment> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>>
>> 362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons. Where
>> floating tennons were not used stub tennons and slots were cut to connect
>> all other pieces and for the frames of the drawer fronts. door fronts,
>> and side panels.
>>
>> No screws except to attach the slides, drawer fronts and handles, door
>> hinges and latches, and to attach the bottom feet to the main cabinet.
>>
>>
>>
>
>
> First class! : )
Thank you!
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Thu, 15 Oct 2009 11:45:22 -0500, "Leon" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>I'd say the generalization probably hold true to most. a.b.p.w. was
>>pretty
>>much deserted 6-8 months ago. Now today, I see almost as much traffic as
>>I
>>did a couple years ago.
>
> I'd say that's mostly because it was approximately a year ago that
> many ISP's started dropping usenet access and in particular, binary
> newsgroups. The more recent amount of postings probably means that
> many of those who lost that service have finally gotten around to
> finding other means of accessing a.b.p.w.
"That" was what I was trying to say. ;~)
"Hoosierpopi" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:7dc34c92-824d-4219-8965-6fca422bd85f@k19g2000yqc.googlegroups.com...
On Oct 13, 7:16 pm, "Leon" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
a b p w - What is that? For one, I would prefer a link. I realize
everyone else knows about a p b w and fully expect scorn a derision,
but thought to make the observation regardless. (;
I guess you gets what whats you pays for.
Upgrade your service and you can see what the rest of us see. Sorry. I
cannot help you.
On Tue, 13 Oct 2009 18:16:46 -0500, "Leon" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I posted the finished bedroom towers on a.b.p.w.
>362 seperate pieces of wood including 136 floating tennons.
Nicely done! Can I assume most if not all of those floating tenons
were Domino cut and installed? If so, I was wondering how strong a
joint you get on a 90? joint with 3/4" plywood? I'm asking about
pulling the joints apart, not flexing the 90? join to break the
tenons.
After all, you're cutting a mortise for a floating tenon that's less
than 3/4" deep. Obviously, you don't want to blast through the
plywood. I think I read it was something like 9/16" deep. Have you
done any personal testing in this area?