ive looked myself and I dont see any new ones.
Type: Posts; User: Jay Keller; Keyword(s):
ive looked myself and I dont see any new ones.
your lucky to have a air conditioned work shop.
it should vent to the outside
1898 cabinets wouldnt have magnetic latches.
Thanks. Thats very interesting article. I tried the gorilla glue and didnt like it because its so messy but it does expand so it has its applications. What is the long setting glue I see mentioned...
what is pva glue. The link goes to a thread, not an article. Is there an article to read?
youll want to wear gloves when using the gorrilla glue. It only wears off.
Yes. Its not worth $75.
you should use greasless lubricant on the saw. Grease and oil attracts the dust.
I always try to use super saver shipping that is free but only if you buy through Amazon. THey are sneaky that way and sometimes your buying from another outfit and you dont even know it.
you might try putting everything on 120v. A 120v switch wont last long on a 220v load.
the band clamps found in plumbing or hvac section are the correct choice
I use a 3hp router and a 3.5 carbide raised panel bit that is part of a cabinet set from Harbor Freight. The set cost $20 and is identical to the 60-$120 sets you buy elsewhere. Only difference is...
MDF ultralite material makes nice doors if your going to paint.
define quality......do you mean the color?
there is no functional difference between the two. The handles are better on the HF version as they are metal
the drawers seem kind of short to be really useful for the big and odd shaped things in the shop
Wow. Pretty sensitive about those cabinets. They will surely collapse under some nominal workshop weight, if you could get equipment onto those narrow counter tops.
Freud, Infinity etc. If it wasnt for the oblivious, the rest of us would not know how good we have it.
a 110v device shold not be used to actuate a 220v load
Its the same OEM that provides them to all. They simply get rebranded and marked up 1000% becuase the companies feel they can take advantage of misplaced brand loyalty.
they look flimsy...and too narrow to be useful
the 3.5 inch raised panel bit from Harbor Freight ($20 for 3 cutter door set), cut through the MDF like butter. No need to gradually increase the cut, it can do it all at once with absolutely no...
Its about the same price to buy premade MDF doors delivered as it would be to buy the retail raw materials to make. Premade are not true paneled doors but routed to appear as raised but with round...
you know now. On sale at the moment a carbide raised panel door set for $20. Whats funny is those who feel it necessary to pay the 80% premium.