Monday, August 10, 2015

Shop Progress

 Somehow between a baby, a full-time job, and new old house I found some time to make progress on the shop.  Over the 4th of July I was able to clean/organize the garage and basement, enough that I could disassemble the table saw cabinet/bench and rebuild its base (after ripping a bunch of french cleats).  This went smoother than I thought, though I now need a new screw extractor, and sawzall blades (someone used cheap screws and left broken drill bits in the wood).  I was able to rotate the caster mounts which provided enough clearance for 360 rotation.  I tried adding some Spax screws to hold the MDF platform to the maple frame, but it never gave me that warm fuzzy I was looking for, so I glued and screwed a sheet of plywood on top of the MDF and it was solid.  The only downside was it raised the table height 23/32" and now that the base was flat and not flexing, not everything lined up "perfectly" on top.  I reassembled it inside the power tool room, and all is well (though it does take up quite a bit of room).

Back power tool wall after cleaning and cleats.
Hand tool room after some cleanup
Then I took some time off from house/shop work.  The last weekends in July I finally came up with a wiring plan I liked, and ran the 350 ft of wire to provide separate circuits to the shop.  Right now I have 3 separate 120 V lines, and 1 dedicated 240 V for the dust collector.  If/when I get a bigger planer/saw/something  I will just swap out the breaker and the outlets on the red circuit for 240 V.
The plan.
3  in the shop (the 4th is hiding)
4 circuits at the source
I then spent a few weeks hemming and hawing over how to run the ductwork for dust collection.  The last time I hung duct work was in Houston after I had an established workflow.  This time I need to get the dust collection up and running before working on any projects (except for this shelf):
First woodworking project in the new house.  Yes, it's just a planed cherry board.
Eventually I came up with a plan that didn't require purchasing extra fittings, and would allow for 6' boards to make it through most machines without too much reconfiguring.  It isn't a perfect setup, but it will allow me to get working, and will evolve as my shop does.  Now the shop is ready for use, and I even have a month to make some birthday gifts for Ian; some blocks and toy chest.

Handtool/lathe area with door to machine room.

Dust collector, clamp rack to be improved.
Planer, tablesaw and air cleaner.
Other side with bandsaw (drillpress is on the floor for now).
Looks like I need to make Ian a bench too.