Tuesday, January 28, 2014
A Dedicated Sharpening Bench part 4
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The Ipe is an extremely dense South American hardwood and is very unforgiving to hand tools- perfect irony isnt it? Here I am making a new sharpening bench and the wood species Im using is ripping the edges off of my plane irons so fast that Im going back and forth to my old sharpening area being reminded with each pass how much Im looking forward to having this new one! Some strange motivation I suppose?
With that I begin planing and dimensioning, sharpening and planing some more. The reverse grain is very unusual in this species, its tones and weight are similar to teak but the dust coming off of it is Kermit the frog green...If youre ever using Ipe with power tools make sure you wear a mask! Im finding the small amount of dust coming off while hand planing a little irritating to my nose and throat. When I have all of the frame components cross cut to length (including joinery) and all surfaced, I can begin my layout.
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Mortise and Tenons
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEihLV1BUau7D-0AivEKvj4RAGYQBM8yl2tmFvKEQud7G4JX1hRwkO7rotOhD4H20NhKEwNJQUg_4v9dYV1Mo6bUv4lLvd5NCfy0Zgkmn5PG5LfvyHLuoCytLw1P0BK3VOHmPzf9a8nAFIa3/s400/bench+5.jpg)
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Ive heard some woodworkers say you should saw right to your scribe lines and I suppose in a perfect world this is true. I unfortunately live a few blocks East of a perfect world so I try to leave a bit of material to pare away to. This is especially true on the cross cuts where I want a crisp shoulder line.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgrZ5bfsu-_g64J8N-gku9Bv2G4ZE8XukZ9NeyzWEXa9rjLU3yOgGydG5p25xSMHtEJ5EvBsvCKOSNm35q-_ayWYNdmAF06KfT0LPaKPKSaqLnN4AExdIe2zNAVPqP_2SCkdj70e4NurObo/s400/bench+7.jpg)
With the tenons cut Ill forget that measuring tapes were ever invented and use the actual work piece to lay out my mortises. Again, I begin with a pencil and mark out my perimeter and follow with a knife line to determine the actual mortise size.
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I begin with a brace and bit and bore out the bulk of the material. These are relatively shallow, stub tenons so I trust my eye and bore down into the oak. For deeper tenons Ill wrap a piece of tape around the bit to show me the finished depth and for really special work pieces Ill actually make up a wooden collar that slips over the bit creating a built in depth stop. But as mentioned, today Im using my eyes.
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They do need to be straight and they really should be square but besides that they can be as rough as you make em. Keeping that in mind I use a rasp to trim the tenons.
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Its fast and easy and all of those scratch marks left behind will actually make for a better glue joint. Another dry fit and its on to the next one.
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The process of cutting the mortise and tenons throughout the frame is pretty much the same system as described above. Pencil to scribe lines and then bore out the waste and.....whats that? The wood? Too hard?
Oh yeah, I almost forgot- the crazy-dense exotic wood from South America proved to be a little too hard for my auger bit so I wasnt able to remove the waste like I did in the Oak. Imagine, the quarter sawn white oak in the bench top is actually the friendlier softer wood! Thats saying a lot.
So instead of removing the waste with my brace and bit I resort to the crashing and bashing of the mortise chisel. It actually went pretty quickly. As hard as this wood is, it works pretty well and while chopping across the grain for the mortises, I exploited the brittle under tones of the Ipe. The tenons were done as described and before I knew it the legs and the feet are complete...at least for tonight. Next time Ill shape the feet and finish the frame. Stay tuned.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhZT3_P4sZSuNHMErFYx-fgnqZwSaEFhdaUX7G5aZfJDJNmQel6lELWxTsi-YJZ-ufeWMaNGiOULXpW2JQ1vyu9pG4TdzRVVaL6t6KEFu64ptSDSeNmMb0bRcBG888xXwSqWe9OPwoERirS/s400/bench+9.jpg)
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