Woodworking Hunt Talkers?

Did you used a planer to get to finished dimensions or do it all with the saw? I could see using the chainsaw to get don to 1x4 as being brain damage! Looks good though (y)
I just use the mill to rip as many 3/4” boards as I can out of each log, then I go to the table saw to rip to a final dimension. I debated using the planner to help clean them up but decided to leave them “rough”. Hit them with 120 grit so we’ll be able to wipe them down but left the saw marks giving them that rough sawn look.
 
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Before and after. A little theater. It's amazing with the sound insulation we installed that the sound system can't be heard outside of the theater. mtmuley
If you don't mind, could you provide some details on the sound insulation you used? I am finishing a bedroom in our basement for a 14 year old future rock star guitar player. There's a lot information out there but it would great to hear from someone with first hand knowledge. Thank you.
 
If you don't mind, could you provide some details on the sound insulation you used? I am finishing a bedroom in our basement for a 14 year old future rock star guitar player. There's a lot information out there but it would great to hear from someone with first hand knowledge. Thank you.
I'll see if I can dig up the actual products we used and get back. mtmuley
 
View attachment 255177Decided to make a walnut table for my wife and her kitchen nook and used some metal legs I had kept around for some reason. Took quite a bit of time to go from a 22 inch black walnut tree I cut down last year, sawmilled into slabs , dried then built into a table. I finished using epoxy, first time I have ever did that type of coating on anything wood. She is happy so it worked out good.
I have been procrastinating about a bandsaw mill for years. Seeing your beautiful table gave me cause to order my new sawmill this morning!
 
Thanks and Good luck with your new mill Redmt I am sure you will enjoy. Go ahead and get some logs ready to mill. I have plenty of walnut, oak, pine, cedar and most anything else I just got to cut the trees down and get them to the mill!
 
There was a 1/4 thick acoustical rubber membrane applied over the framing. Both walls and ceiling. All openings around outlets, lighting and speakers sealed. Then a hat channel with acoustical isolators. Then 1/2 plywood. Then the shiplap siding. There are 17 speakers and subwoofers in the space. All of it is controlled remotely. mtmuley
We just sound insulated an interior simulated golf room the same way in the barn we're building. All the sound system and speakers are located in the adjacent copper-top bar and lounge though.
 
Acidentally spilled my big box of old pictures last week and came across this.
It's the entryway to the Vail Valley Cancer Center in Edward's, CO. Me and a couple other guys did this in 2001. Milled and canoed 18" logs wrapped around steel I-beams.
Wonder how it looks today?
(crappy picture of a picture of an almost- completed project 🙂)20221211_085934.jpg
 
This is a little off the beaten track but can anybody here recommend a source for stabilized wood knife scales or blocks? I'm looking to make a set of steak knives and I'd like to at least consider stabilized wood along with all of my oddball unstabilized scraps.
 
This is a little off the beaten track but can anybody here recommend a source for stabilized wood knife scales or blocks? I'm looking to make a set of steak knives and I'd like to at least consider stabilized wood along with all of my oddball unstabilized scraps.
A friend of mine made me a custom handle out of Purple Heart. I'll try to get a pic up. mtmuley
 
This is a little off the beaten track but can anybody here recommend a source for stabilized wood knife scales or blocks? I'm looking to make a set of steak knives and I'd like to at least consider stabilized wood along with all of my oddball unstabilized scraps.
Most of the knifemaker supply shops carry stabilized wood blanks. I couldn’t name a specific source though.
 
This was my first “real” project that I made when we were expecting our first child. It was a big hit with the wife. I used a set of plans and milled it from rough lumber.
 

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Anyone have any recommendations for a mid level table saw? I have 110v, and my job site kobalt saw is a nightmare. Nothing is square and the throat is warped causing stock to get hung up. I’d like to go the hybrid cabinet saw route. I was saving up for a saw stop, but that fund got pilfered for a well deserved set of diamond earrings. I see grizzly has a few hybrid saws that are fairly affordable, Laguna has the Fusion F1, and also the rigid/delta contractor saws for around $600 and cheaper on marketplace. The saw stop is way more then I want to spend or need for my current skill level, but I keep coming back to the safety feature. I know the rigid/delta would be a huge step up from what I have, but is it worth saving a little more for the grizzly or Laguna?
 
I have a Rigid contractor/portable table saw and it fits my needs well. Very good fence and cuts square. I removed the safety cover over the blade. For me those things are more of a danger than safety feature. I push the fence against the blade and lock it down when saw is not in use.

 
I bought a tin top Craftsman about 1974 and wore it out but it never failed. I replaced it in 2005 with another cast top Craftsman when we built the new log home. It has literally cut thousands of feet of lumber from finish grade trim to cutting 1/4"aluminum for shop projects. I highly recommend it for longevity and accuracy.
 
When I built my cabin, I purchased a jobsite Delta table saw which I ran off a generator. It ripped and crosscut many, many BF of dimensional lumber and poles and rails.
I still use it today, twenty years later.
 
Back in 2000-ish I bought a Ridgid table saw. It is a hybrid with a cast iron top and wings. I have used it for so many things and while it seemed like an extravagance when I bought it, I've had it for 20 years and it was worth every penny.

I do wish I had a Saw Stop just for the safety aspect but regardless of the direction you go, buy the best you can get since you will most likely use it for a long time.
 
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