Demo Night 7/23/08 - Greene & Greene Style Joint

Posted on July 24, 2008 by The Wood Whisperer.
Categories: Contributors, Woodworking.

Download Low Resolution
Download High Resolution


This is an excerpt from the live Demo Night that took place 7/23/08. The topic was creating Greene & Greene style joint for the Gadget Station project. Its a long video, but lots of details were covered and numerous questions were thrown out by the chat room. This was our best turnout yet with 180+ viewers! This isn’t exactly as fun as the live experience but its a close second for those who couldn’t make it. Enjoy!



Gadget Station Ideas (Pt. 1)

Posted on by The Wood Whisperer.
Categories: Contributors.

We have a number of folks working on their own versions of a gadget station. Most are still in the design phase but we have heard from a few folks who already had this idea in the past. If you are anything like me, you can use all the inspiration you can get! So here is an idea submitted by a viewer.

Below is a quick SketchUp concept video from Ron, owner of R Jones Woodworks. Here’s how he sums it all up so far:
With regard to design I wanted to the piece to be highly functional as well as flexible. Something that is hard to use, won’t get used at all. There were probably 4 or 5 factors that drove the design. 1- It needed to support just about any electronic device with no modifications. So I created a trough, if you will, so almost any size device can be simply laid down. Also, in the event something larger needs to be charged, the shelves can be flipped up and the device laid on the bottom. 2- It needed to be easy to use, adding devices etc. Simply flip the shelves and swing the door to access the power strip. 3- The design needs to be clean both inside and out. Small elongated keyhole slots allow plugs to pass thru at any point along the shelf. This also increases the flexibility. 4. I needed a way to deal with a potential heat issue. Simple rectangular holes will be cut in the top and bottom to allow for ventilation. This area will most likely be covered in some sort of metal mesh. 5. Shelves will most likely be covered in an ESD (electrostatic discharge) friendly material to help with those issues.



Teaching at Marc Adams – Day Four



Ches in Nichols, N.Y. asked me via e-mail to post a photo of the project piece so readers could see what the project looks like when finished. That way he could track the progress of the class. You ask, we respond. Not only that, I think that’s a great idea.

Also, I promised photos of assembled cases and here they are as well. I’m mighty impressed with the work going on in this class. I’m especially impressed with the caliber of students that the Marc Adams School of Woodworking (MASW) draws through the door. The woodworker pictured at the top of the Day Two entry completes his Master program with this class. Others in the class are well on their way to that goal. And the first-timers attending the school – at least one class participant is here building only his second piece of furniture - are all doing great work, as evidenced by the cases that are assembled after only three days of work.



A couple things happened today. From the class instructor’s point of view, today was hectic. The work on the chests rounded the corner and headed toward detail-oriented work. I made my way to each workbench more than a few times to answer questions (some on how to fix minor problems and some to get a quick affirmation of the steps that are needed to get the case assembled).

From a woodworking perspective, we set off the SawStop yesterday morning. Easy – it wasn’t an injury avoided –MASW shop advisors don’t let students get into an injury-causing set-up. This was something totally different. One student positioned his dado for the large sliding dovetail used to join the case top to the case sides in the wrong location, then painfully (you could see in his eyes he was frustrated) fit a patch in place. The patch worked and his case is assembled, but the patch caused the problem.

After letting the glue dry for a couple hours, he returned to the saw to cut new dados. The shop advisors didn’t realize the patch was in place, so they didn’t know to set the saw in bypass mode – where you knowingly turn off the safety feature. The wet glue inside the patch was enough to complete the circuit and the cartridge blew. There was a bit of down time before we were back in action at that saw, but with three others in our classroom, that simply meant no dado stack for a short time and another lesson learned.



So here’s what’s on tap for today. Most of the attendees are interested in the sculpting of the drawer fronts and building a drawer with traditional 18th-century techniques. From the opening bell through 1 p.m., we’ll stick with finishing the case work pertaining to the feet, which some guys began work on late in the day, and base mouldings. At 1 p.m., we begin on the drawer fronts, no matter what. That means there are four hours today and nearly six hours tomorrow for this most-important phase of construction.

You know you have to check back to see how things go!

— Glen Huey

p.s. Click here to read "Teaching at Marc Adams — Day One," here for "Day Two" and here for "Day Three."