Professional BoatBuilder Magazine - Written for boatbuilders, repairers, designers, and surveyors First posted in , the CLC Builder�s Forum is for builders of CLC's many boats as well as others building wooden boats. The amateur and professional builders reading and posting on this forum have an enormous wealth of knowledge drawn from an amazing variety of boatbuilding projects. This forum is moderated by the CLC staff. Aug 04, �� Prior to these tests, Klopman, sponsored by Professional Boatbuilder magazine, also distributed a questionnaire to 94 fellow surveyors. The results are eye-opening. Ninety percent said they owned either the Sovereign or Tramex. Forty percent have been using the instrument for one to five years. The majority use it weekly. �Brian McManus in �Liar Liar� provides a sardonic account of the country�s response to Covid the poems describe medics resorting to �council bin bags� as makeshift PPE, the betrayal of the elderly in care homes, the dishonesty of empty-headed political leaders, the ruthless exploitation of big business and the end of the age of certainties.
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After watching Frank Klausz cut a set of dovetails in three minutes using a special bowsaw blade see the video here in our video section , Rob Cosman decided to show that it can be done by cutting the tails first.

Frank cuts his pins first. Want one? Exhibit A is over at WKfinetools. You can shorten the workpiece a hair with a quick touch of the disc. You can also adjust the angle by a fraction of a degree.

Instead of�. Even better, I had a mentor with an incredible collection. Owen Riley was a photographer at the newspaper where I worked, and he�. Whenever John Economaki of Bridge City Tools teaches classes about furniture design, he always asks his students a question that seems to have no good answer. The question goes something like this: Would you rather have a piece of furniture with great lines but so-so craftsmanship, or a somewhat dumpy-looking project with perfect and crisp�.

David Thiel, then an associate editor at the magazine, has been assigned to give me a�. When I first opened the package, I assumed that the tool inside was a prototype that had a plastic blade. But no, the white chunk of stuff at the end of the Gladstone�. As woodworkers dive into handwork, they usually start with a block plane, then the bench planes, the saws and the joinery planes. Joinery planes , such as plow planes, router planes, shoulder planes and rabbeting planes, are some of the easiest planes to set up and use.

Their irons are straightforward to sharpen no curves�. Our goal for these columns is to show that attractive, well made projects can be made with a minimal amount of tools and time.

For me, finger joints have always been the nerdy, square cousin to the dovetail. Finger joints are immensely strong when glued properly. But they are usually used by beginning woodworkers in places where a dovetail would be more appropriate, such as on a piece of 18th-century casework.

Add to that the fact that finger joints�. There is something deep inside our DNA that ties us to the chest as a form of furniture. First off, how many other kinds of furniture do we have that are named after critical parts of our own bodies? I am planning to order a corner chisel, to use when I install hinges, and have seen several styles.

Which do you prefer? The piece of wood has a routed mortise with rounded corners. The corners need�. Cut by Eye When dovetailing by hand, be bold.

After gauging a thickness line across the board, lay out the pins with your saw as you make each cut. Trust your eye to find a�. Some tools are like high school girlfriends.

Other tools are like good spouses. The relationship gets better with time, even when you are both a little worn around the edges. And there were a couple things I was wondering about. One is the question of glue longevity. If I glue together a tabletop with�. This weekend I put the finishing touches on two Stickley tabourets; and while the little tables turned out to my satisfaction, the construction process proved quite vexing considering there are only nine pieces of wood in each.

The theme of Issue 9 is sawing , understanding sawtooth technology and how to use that knowledge in�. Plus the projects are fast and , if I do�. Sometimes your woodworking improves like a slow and steady climb up a mountain. Sometimes, however, you get to ride the elevator. Then I traded up to a mechanical pencil, which never needed sharpening.

Then one day I found my old�. Whenever I get into some serious handwork, I always try to boil down the processes so that I can 1 remember it Professional Boatbuilder Magazine Pdf Zip myself and 2 occasionally explain it to others including a couple children who are slack-jawed with boredom. Today as I was cleaning up the half-lap joints for the Stickley tabouret on my�. Men have become the tools of their tools. My aversion to the machine had nothing to do with safety, accuracy, philosophy or�.

I enjoy a good beating. Chopping dovetails or mortises is almost as pleasurable as sawing or planing. For years I tried to make myself like the traditional round mallet used in carving and cabinetmaking. When this happens, it takes you back to the blog entry, but your comment is still unposted and at the bottom of the page.

If you enter your code�. Contemporary writing on woodworking, of which I am woefully guilty, always seeks to make the craft as simple as possible. We try to make the joints easy, quick and straightforward.

We tend to promote furniture designs that have straight lines and wide appeal. Yet the grain in the stretchers near the floor runs horizontally. One of my favorite tasks in the shop is making solid-wood tabletops.

Before using a router bit, I dress the edge with a diamond file, and I usually touch up the chisel before machine cutting mortises. Sharp is good, but�. Question: Looking over the current and past issues of Woodworking Magazine, I see how drawboring or wedging a mortise and tenon joint will improve the strength and fit of the joint. But is there a reason to pick either drawboring or wedging over the other technique in terms of the strength or durability of the�.

In the Stickley side table from the November issue, there are enough variations of mortise and tenon joints to give your hands and your head a real workout. One of the things I enjoy most about woodworking is puzzing out how to do things. This is the top of one of the back legs. However, cut nails can sometimes be difficult to find.

Tremont Nail is an�. If you do any work at all with hand tools, a good marking gauge is an essential piece of equipment. One of the best things about going to an exhibit of new or antique furniture is getting to examine the joinery , closely and from the inside of the piece. I will pull every drawer out if allowed , stick my head in a carcase and send my fingers probing into the darkest voids.

Like most home woodworkers, my dang day job tends to get in the way of my woodworking. Gerunds, appositives and dangling participles have all conspired to keep me chained to this keyboard. Some projects play along nicely; others tend to fight you all the way.

The Creole Table is shaping up to be a bit of a raging Cajun. My goal this week was to complete the top of the table and cut the curved transitions between the apron and cabriole legs. The walnut for the top�. One of the big challenges in building a project for publication is to come up with techniques that use common tools and skills to produce results that others can replicate using the same tools and techniques.

I like working with walnut, but I hate marking it. Its dark color makes pencil lines disappear. And its open grain hide knife lines as well. Dovetailing is a particular problem for me. But even if I�. I always enjoy tours of tool factories to see people or robots make things that are useful to my work. How a company can harness hundreds of minds and hands and mechanical pincers to produce things is fascinating, and every tour is surprising and different. After finishing college, two of my closest friends joined the Peace Corps and were posted to rural Morocco.

But within a year they were back in the United States: 20 pounds lighter, two shades paler and singularly disillusioned. Their job in Morocco could be boiled down to one simple lesson for the villagers: Do not�. In China, was the year of the rooster. In our shop, was the year of the anvil.

We built a guillotine out of framing material and dropped anvils of three weights Professional Boatbuilder Magazine Pdf Editor on joints to see how they fail. We learned a few things. First: You can get paid for doing juvenile stuff with�. Trestle tables have always looked notoriously spindly and rickety to my eye. Add to the fact that they are normally quite lengthy, and it seems like you have a recipe for a wobbly mealtime.

But after inspecting a fair number of historical examples�. So it should come as no surprise that�. One of my favorite movies as a teen-ager had a scene where a s-era G-man goes to a mystic for help in becoming a superhero.

The G-man shows the mystic , named Sombra , a photo of a caped hero and asks for a magic word to become like him. One of the themes coursing through the next issue of Woodworking Magazine is rethinking the role of nails in woodworking. Perhaps the most frustrating part of using cut nails was�. A fair number of historical texts recommend this with large-scale joints particularly in timber framing.

When I do�. Have you ever wondered why there are specific rules for the sizes of mortise-and-tenon joints? Did you know there are rules? If you consult the 19th and early 20th century texts, they state that tenons should be one-third the thickness of your stock. And that the tenons should be five times as long as they�. One of the curious aspects of investigating drawboring has been the mystery surrounding antique drawbore pins.

Almost all of the examples of pins I come across are big , too big for cabinet work, really. I do have set of boxwood-handles pins�. During a demonstration of drawboring I gave a few weeks�. The historically correct shape of the drawbore pin shown in our Autumn issue has come into question this week. There is a lot to know about nails.

I built the cabinet from the first issue I used cherry and spalted maple � it came out pretty nice. I have looked and looked and can not find a reference to these�. Many cabinets with shelves are built using a common method: You plow dados in the sides of the cabinet.

And then you glue the shelves into the dados. Perhaps you glue on a face frame to the carcase; perhaps not. With glue alone, this is a questionable joint. The end grain of the shelf joins�.

In looking at a lot of old fine furniture, you might be surprised how much of it is made using nails. I think the problem comes from the fact that we are using the wrong nail. Most nails today are�. Instead you show pocket screws. Long answer: The original Gustav Stickley 79 magazine stand was available in a few�. Tricks of the Trade. Jointing with a Planer. Continue Reading. Board-Stretching Joint. Joyners vs. Carpenters, Lock Miter Setup Jig. Impossible Dovetails. Beadlock Pro Joinery Kit.

Feature Articles. An Ideal Joint for Small Drawers. Butterfly Keys Made Easy. Mitered Half-lap Joinery. Jasmine Jewelry Box. Kreg K5. Finger-Joint Table. Dowels and Tenons with a Grip. Shop Blog. The Maloof Chair Joint. Woodworking Blogs. Show Your Bandsaw Some Love. Woodworking Videos.

Video: Joinery in Curvy Furniture. Tongue and Groove Joinery. Make Clean Through-Mortises. Frame Miter Joints. Box Clever, Use Box Cleats. American Woodworker Blog. Questions And Answers. Woodworking Books. Learning from Windsor Chair Joints.

Router Table Box Joints. A New Manual for Biscuit Joiners. Chris Schwarz Blog. Breadboard Ends � 5 Approaches. Tools in Your Shop. Woodworking Daily Blog.

Pros and Cons of Routers for Joinery. Hand Tools Techniques. Loose Tenon Joinery. Pocket Screws with Fine Furniture. Defective Dovetail Diagnosis. Dovetails of Flavors. Fitting Drawers One Piece at a Time. Drawboring Resurrected.

Chris Schwarz Woodworking Classes. Dovetails with Help from the Drill Press. New Workbench Build. Woodworking Hand Tools. Secret Dovetails for the Rest of Us. Cut Accurate and Clean Rabbets. Power Tools. Better Dados for Casework. Product Spotlight. On Symmetry and Screwing Up. Installing a Drawer Stretcher. Slideshow: Cutting Keyed Miter Joints. Personal Favorites. Roorkhee Chair: First Look. Better Than Measuring.

Handplane Techniques. Raw Materials. Exploit the Weakness of the Tree. Cut Rabbets by Hand. Cutting Tenons on a Table Saw. Look Ma, No Clamps. A Pause in the Hostilities.

A Slightly Fancier Tool Chest. Spacing Dovetails with Dividers � a Little History. The Case for Hidden Joinery. Marking and Measuring. The Black Knife. Other Projects. Making Frames. Quick Jigs for Flat and Square Glue-ups. Table Saw Safety. Speed Tenons � Safely. Perfect Edge Joints. How I Glue Chair Mortises. Amaze your friends with quadrilateral and rising dovetails. Router-enhanced Dovetails. Easy Curvaceous Edge Joints. New Connector System from Lamello. Slip-fit Corrects a Slip in Planning.

Iron Out Those Dents. Helical Cutterhead Makes Better Tenons. Hand-cut Dovetails 2. Trust Yourself. Trust No One. Darwin, Roubo and a Sickening Sound. Full-size Pattern of the Folding Bookstand. Another Translation. Another Use. Another Bookstand. Reader Questions. Sawing Techniques. Need a Moxon Double-screw Vise? Making Plans: A Bookcase from the Beginning. Video Tip: Clenching a Nail with Confidence.

Match Mortise Size Without Measuring. Weird Wooden Nail? It's the Bit. An Unusual Shape for Wooden Nails. A Dovetail a Day � Hurray. General Tools recently announced the release of the E. Woodworking In America. Dueling Dovetails. Smith Screwdrivers � Not Neighborly.

Details on the Divided-light Door. A Week at The Windsor Institute. The Good Kind of Wedgie. Schwarz on Workbenches. Thanks Be to Mongo. Mortises and Tenons and Telephones. Extremely Bendable Wood. On Your Feet, Frenchman!

Wood Movement in Ancient Benches. First Leg, First Fit. March 30 is John Henry Day. Roubo's Dovetail-Tenon is Twisted. Roubo's Sliding-Dovetail-Tenon Joint.

Cheater Video: Cutting Tenon Shoulders. Dovetails in Real Time. Cheating at Tenon Shoulders. Come to the Klausz Side. Eye Candy: Half-blind Dovetails in A Bit of Voodoo for Cursed Doors.

How to get Flat-footed. Tablesaw Box Joints. The Undeniable Urge to Meddle. Curse of the Chinese Stool. What is Not a Tool Mark? Better Self-administered Wedgies. Woodworking in America: Disassemble This! February SketchUp Tutorials. Why This Detail Was Abandoned. Bound Up On the Topic of Glue. Wary and Paralyzed in the 19th Century. Amendment to My Review of Drawbore Pins. She explores both the joys and the difficulties. There is a wide emotional and tonal range here: Howarth-Lowe can be witty and funny, but at other times she is deeply moving.

There is also a vividness to her writing that enables us to share with her the experiences she describes. This is the work of a highly accomplished writer, able to produce lines and images that will live long in the memory. I could go on but I think you get my point. I just loved words and reading and writing from being very small. I enjoy experimenting and trying new styles and forms but my strongest poems always seem to come from a place of imagination rather than research. Overall then, many thanks to everybody that entered and congratulations to the Shortlisted poets and winners alike.

Anger and bewilderment and loss give way to an appreciation of the rhythms of the natural world. And so at 86 I shall progress further; at 90 I shall even further penetrate their secret meaning and by I shall perhaps truly have reached the level of the marvellous and the divine. When I am , each dot, each line, will possess a life of its own. I have recently been awakened by Extinction Rebellion.

We have 11 years to address the climate emergency on our planet. Today is I asked Annie some horrendously impertinent questions.. The death of my father, and b. The support of the garden. I worked on the poem for months. I grew up listening to Sorley Maclean, the Bard of my Clan. They are rich in colour and detail offering us a clear-eyed account of a world bequeathed us, a world beyond loss.

Sue is a special poet, and to coincide with our celebration of this fine collection of poetry, Sue, along with David Leo Sirois and Paul Stephenson, are holding an evening of Parisian poetic delights on the 10th of March at 7pm GMT. This is a confident and immensely impressive collection with an underlying humanity that richly rewards the reader and leaves you wondering what she will do next.

Sue Burge is a North Norfolk based poet. She has been a freelance creative writing and film studies tutor and writing mentor since Previously, Sue taught English, literature, cultural studies, film and creative writing for over twenty years at the University of East Anglia. A fully qualified teacher, Sue has taught a wide range of groups both in the UK and abroad.

Sue runs a wide variety of writing courses in East Anglia. Face-to-face courses, workshops and retreats are also on offer. Sue also has a popular international course by e-mail subscription, The Writing Cloud , where you can sign up for monthly prompts and feedback. She is an experienced mentor and has brought many interesting writing projects to fruition. Although she has had short stories published, Sue is primarily a poet and her poetry can be found in a wide range of magazines and anthologies.

Thanks to the generosity of the Arts Council, Sue was able to spend time in Paris in where she created a body of work exploring her personal relationship with Paris, as well as its cinematic and literary legacy.

I asked Sue some horrendously impertinent questions.. It was as simple as that. An obsession was born. I applied for an Arts Council grant to write a collection of poetry which focused on films set in Paris and took myself off on a six-week residency.

I spent hours walking the streets, notebook in hand. I Discovered a wonderful company which did cinema walks around Paris, I visited locations and the sites of old studios, watched dozens and dozens of films, read dozens of books and wrote at least three poems a week.

My first stint was five weeks in a gorgeous flat with plenty of space for me to spread page after page of the book. It took around two years to put the collection together but every moment was a delight. I wrote from a very young age, poems, novels, short stories. My childhood was very character building in so many other ways! I love engaging imaginatively with fact. I wanted to really immerse myself in cinematic experience.

I made a few changes to the poem after that. I stood on the bridge over the Canal St Martin which features in several films and just wrote as the world passed by. I find writing in cafes very stimulating and, of course, Parisian cafes are very much part of the literary and cinematic tradition and helped my immersive research considerably. I think that due to my immersion in Paris during the main year of writing the volume, and many subsequent visits, I did have a very authentic experience, which is transmitted in the book.

Safer is the common recommendation to scrape away bottom paint and place the meter head directly on clean gelcoat. Be wary, however, of paint remaining in the gelcoat pores. Owners should also know that these meters will often detect the steel webbing inside a rudder, sometimes even the copper foil used as a counterpoise for SSB radios, and condensation on the inside of the hull.

Its alarm just beeps. Individual Meters In addition to bench and field tests, we also evaluated each meter for quality of construction, handling, visibility and overall ease of use. Following are our comments, plus a brief description of each meter. Sovereign The UK-made Sovereign comes in a heavy-duty binocular-type case. Unlike most of the others, it comes with instructions, but no mention is made of fiberglass.

The separate transducer head is connected via a cord. There are both probes for wood and a disc-shaped head for hard surfaces. Strengths Heavy duty metal case and dials. Instructions for calibration and use. Battery check but no warning and calibration. Remote head is compact, but must be unplugged to fit in case.

Adjustable alarm and zero control. Plastic protective cover for head. Easy battery access. Pins for probing wood. Weaknesses No power on light; easy to drain batteries. Two-handed use is awkward. Neither of its two scales are calibrated for fiberglass. Scales not evenly graduated. Pressure on head affects readings. Doesnt compensate for low voltage.

Tramex Skipper Made in Ireland, the Tramex has an analog display with three scales. The transducer consists of two large pads on the backside of the same plastic case used by the Caisson Novanex. Strengths Light, handy.

Battery on light, but no check function. Scale evenly graduated and easy to interpret. Weaknesses Scale switch inexpensive. Three scales not sequential from sensitive to less-sensitive i.

Alarm non-adjustable. Large footprint. Case appears fragile. No automatic off feature. Small display difficult to read. The display is digital. Like the Aquant, the head is at the forward end of the case. Backlit LCD display easy to read. Small footprint; easy to orient head. Hard plastic head appears durable. Adjustable zero, alarm threshold, upper end of range Low battery indicator. Weaknesses Case appears fragile. No audio alarm.

Poor switch. Protimeter Aquant Made in the UK, this meter differs from the others in that it transmits a radio frequency RF which is returned to the receiving electrode through the body of the user.

Moisture in the laminate acts as an aerial that re-radiates the RF to the lower half of the instrument. This is called a free field effect. A transfer electrode or near field shield may be placed over the transmitter head for shallow readings. Placing a hand on the surface being measured affects the readings. The transmitter head is along the forward end of the case and has a small footprint. To take readings, a single button is pushed.

Readings are displayed by lighting up individual LED lights. Small footprint. Easy to see readings, except in direct sunlight. Will not turn on at low voltage 8V.

Space to carry spare battery. Automatic off but time interval too short. Adjustable alarm threshold. Weaknesses Switch not sealed.

No battery check feature. Head subject to abrasion. Must be held 90 to surface, which is sometimes difficult. Near field attachment unreliable at thicknesses over 0. Protimeter Surveymaster SM A relatively new product, the Surveymaster has a display similar to the Aquant, but the scale is different.

Also, the transducer head is on the backside of the meter, covered with plastic, but easy to rock. The remote head and separate probes are attractive features. When using the remote head, the reading is displayed in a small LCD window. Durable rubber case gasket. Remote head and probes. Easy battery access; good battery contacts.

Battery indicator. Adjustable audio alarm. Weaknesses Head difficult to keep at 90 to surface. Because of head location on back, holding hand tends to obscure the LCD lights. No numbers on scale. Conclusion The moisture meter is actually a fairly simple device.

Some have called them glorified stud finders. A moisture meter cannot tell you the soundness of your hull laminate. But it can give you worthwhile clues on which to pursue further investigation.




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