It was finally time to do the part that made me fairly nervous - boring the holes through the arm bow and into the seat. I recently bought an 18" auger bit extension, and it might have made boring the seat holes a breeze, but it didn't fit through the 5/8" holes in the arm bow. So I was left with the method I tried with the prototype arm bow.
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Boring the first hole, using the alignment stick I made |
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The alignment stick is two pieces glued to a straight stick, one is 5/16" wider than the other. The pointed end (left) goes into the seat hole location. The upper end (at right) rests against and guides the auger bit. |
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Here's the upper end guiding the auger bit |
When that hole was completed, I looked through the hole to see if it was pointing in the right direction. It felt good, so I bored the rest of the holes.
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If you blow up this picture, you see a pencil tip pointing to the seat hole location. |
Now came another interesting part. I had to figure out how to bore the hole in the seat at the exact angle as the corresponding arm bow hole. As I mentioned, I didn't have an extension that would fit through the arm bow hole. Here's what I came up with.
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A straight 1/2" stick with a point at the bottom end and a few wraps of tape to make it a good fit in the 5/8" arm bow hole. The stick has a lengthwise line drawn on it. |
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I moved a square around the seat until it lined up with the line on the stick. |
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Then connected the seat hole location with the square to get the sightline. |
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Along that sightline, I measured the resultant angle of the stick ... |
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... and marked it down on the seat by each hole location |
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Then I bored the holes with the help of a mirror, a square and the bevel gauge |
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Here's the seat with all stick holes bored, showing all the sightlines too |
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A first fitting of the sticks into their holes, sans arm bow |
When I fitted the sticks in both the arm bow and seat, I found some misalignment in a few sticks. I used a small rasp to widen the bottom of a few holes in the arm bow to give those sticks some wiggle room, and that helped get the sticks seated in their holes.
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The arm bow is out of the picture here, but the sticks are in their arm bow holes. The pencil is pointing to a stick that isn't pointing well to it's seat hole. |
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So I relieved a little material in the underside of the arm bow hole to allow that stick to move left and back. |
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After a few iterations of this, all sticks fit in the seat and arm bow |
Next time I'll get into making the undercarriage.
Impressive work setting up all those sight lines would have given me serious stress. I think for mine I used a shorty drill and bit and eyeballed alignment through the arm hole before I had an extension and could go through.
ReplyDelete—JMAWWorks
Hey Jeremy, good to hear from you. I like your method, too. If I had a shorty setup, that's probably what I would have done.
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