glenn bradley
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I sold a bunch of dad's turning stuff (still have some to go). I gathered enough to make me finally buy a combo sander that I have been after for about 15 years. It's funny; I wouldn't pay the price back when it was about half of what it is now. I view it as a gift from dad.
At any rate with the current prices of new material and the down right unavailability of some others I sat down to percolate. I still have a fair amount of the free material I got from a guy who runs a cabinet shop; it was rain damaged. I decided to see if I could come up with a design that would use the sizes of material I had available. I didn't start taking pictures right away because the thing is going to be butt-ugly. At some point I thought I might as well share the journey. I'm sure I'm not the only dumpster diver out there.
You can see the damage to the material but, there is a lot of usable stuff left. The pro shop just couldn't make a financial argument for trimming all the waste off in an attempt to get usable pieces. Hooray for me.



My plan was to use large rabbets to house the thin stock and internal reinfocement for structural rigidity. The sander weighs about 145 lbs and will be mobile.

Here's the side panels, one shellacked, one not.

Yesterdays spoil becomes today's dominoes.

cont'd . . .
At any rate with the current prices of new material and the down right unavailability of some others I sat down to percolate. I still have a fair amount of the free material I got from a guy who runs a cabinet shop; it was rain damaged. I decided to see if I could come up with a design that would use the sizes of material I had available. I didn't start taking pictures right away because the thing is going to be butt-ugly. At some point I thought I might as well share the journey. I'm sure I'm not the only dumpster diver out there.
You can see the damage to the material but, there is a lot of usable stuff left. The pro shop just couldn't make a financial argument for trimming all the waste off in an attempt to get usable pieces. Hooray for me.



My plan was to use large rabbets to house the thin stock and internal reinfocement for structural rigidity. The sander weighs about 145 lbs and will be mobile.

Here's the side panels, one shellacked, one not.

Yesterdays spoil becomes today's dominoes.

cont'd . . .
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