2:11 through 2:28 are photos of running the strips through the router table. One side is run with a coving bit and the other with a beading bit. 2:26 through 2:28 photo shows some strips finished. The one on the left has the bead and cove visible. The left side is rounded convex (bead) and the right side is concave (cove). Each beaded edge along the entire strip fits into the coved edge of the previous strip and adapts well to bending and vurving of the strips. See 3:55.
They are 1/4 thick x 5/8 wide. More importantly, we learned to plane them all to exactly the same thickness. Varying thickness created problems, even minor variances.
They are all beaded and coved.
Hope you get a chance to see pt.s 2-4 as well. They are in the water.
Can you show me an example of the bead and cove? Thanks.
MrLeonard55 1 year ago
@MrLeonard55
2:11 through 2:28 are photos of running the strips through the router table. One side is run with a coving bit and the other with a beading bit. 2:26 through 2:28 photo shows some strips finished. The one on the left has the bead and cove visible. The left side is rounded convex (bead) and the right side is concave (cove). Each beaded edge along the entire strip fits into the coved edge of the previous strip and adapts well to bending and vurving of the strips. See 3:55.
Crashmo1 1 year ago
How thick are the strips and did you put a beed and cove on them?
JustWonderingHowToDo 1 year ago
@JustWonderingHowToDo
They are 1/4 thick x 5/8 wide. More importantly, we learned to plane them all to exactly the same thickness. Varying thickness created problems, even minor variances.
They are all beaded and coved.
Hope you get a chance to see pt.s 2-4 as well. They are in the water.
Crashmo1 1 year ago
AWESOME JOB ! Looking forward to seeing the rest of the stages
cherokee0566269 1 year ago
@cherokee0566269
Look for the same title, Pts. 2 through 4 plus the paddle. We've actually had them in the water for a year now.
Crashmo1 1 year ago