May 21, 2012

In the mail: buy a Leigh D4R Pro in April, and get a free router bit set

Another great deal from Leigh Industries — in case if you did not receive the announcement via e-mail, I can share the following with you:

For the entire month of April, you get the free router bit set if you buy a D4R Pro dovetail jig. For all details, please go to this Leigh web page.

Edit to add (per the latest e-mail from Leigh):

The best dovetail jig on the market just got better! The immensely capable D4R Dovetail jig is now the D4R Pro. Along with the new name comes two exciting new features; the ability to rout 5 sizes of Single Pass Dovetails and 2 sizes of box joints….all with the standard finger assembly.

A little background: Several years ago, a long time before Leigh became my sponsor, I bought the D4 dovetail jig. Back then, these specials were rare – but now YOU can take advantage of these deals! I have always been a happy user of the D4. It is the workhorse in my shop when I have dovetails to cut on a project.

Disclaimer: Leigh Industries is one of the sponsors of this blog.

Here’s How It Works! During the month of April 2010, buy a Leigh D4R Pro (formerly D4R) Dovetail Jig from your favorite woodworking tool store and mail your original receipt to Leigh Industries. Leigh will send the 12-piece bit set (Item 2411-8) for the D4R Pro, absolutely free! That’s a $169.00 value! Be sure to fill the information in the form provided at the page linked to the image below:

Al Navas

Announcement: get a free router bit set when you buy a Super 18 or 24 Leigh dovetail jig


Yesterday I received an e-mail message from Leigh Industries and I must share it with you; this might save you a few bucks:

March madness! Free $109 router bit set with the purchase of a Leigh Super 18 or Super 24 dovetail jig. Here’s How It Works! During the month of March 2010, buy a Leigh Super Jig Dovetail Jig, 18″ or 24″ only, from your favorite woodworking tool store, and we will send the 7-piece bit set for the Super Jig, absolutely free! That’s a $109.00 value!

— e-mail from Leigh
March 1, 2010

For complete instructions from Leigh, make sure to check their web page. You must fill out a form and send the original dated cash register receipt. All receipts must be dated between March 1 and March 31, 2010, and all claims must be made before April 30, 2010. And, as always, if you buy from one of my Affiliates (below), you will help my effort, as I get a small percentage of your purchases.

Disclosure: Leigh is a sponsor of my blog.

Al Navas

You can buy your dovetail jigs
from one of my Affiliates:
Woodcraft:

.
Or from Rockler:

Using my new (old!) shooting board from Evenfall Studios

OK, I must admit it. I have had the shooting board from Evenfall Studios (Rob Hanson, Owner) in the shop since June of 2009. One thing led to another, and the board sat without use for several months. Even The Schwarz gave it a glowing review on his blog in early July, 2009; that review pushed me to (try to) use it – but I was unable to do so, as a result of a shoulder injury that has since healed for the most part.

With that mandatory preliminary out of the way, I found myself in a situation that needed correcting before I could assemble the standing desk. When I made the leg stretchers, I consciously left the tenons about 0.050″ too long, to be trimmed later; this made it much simpler to get the shoulder-to-shoulder length of the stretchers matched perfectly to the distance between the legs, front-to-back and near the top of the legs (in other words, square).

Later became today. You can see the gap between the stretcher (vertical) and the edge of the leg (horizontal):

The tenons are too long.

I could have used the table saw to trim the dual tenons, but I really, really wanted to try my hand with the shooting board. Of course, I don’t have a specialized shooting plane in the shop, like the one my friend Ron Brese makes (maybe Sandy will read this soon). But I had the old reliable Stanley #5 sharp and ready to go – a very good thing when you shoot the end grain (notice the end grain curlies?):

Shooting board in use.

Well…As expected, the Stanley #5 does not have the cheeks perfectly square to the sole, but it did a splendid job in trimming the tenons – all it took was a little fiddling with the iron angle using the lateral adjuster, and I was shooting square! Hint: Using a block plane, I put a little bevel on the back side of the unsupported tenons, to eliminate tearout.

After trimming off the 50 thousands of an inch or so, I was so excited I did not even realize the following photo was out of focus – the trimmed tenons, and a much tighter fit, before drawboring and tightening the stretcher to the leg:

Gap closed!

A neat feature of the Evenfall shooting board is its adjustable fence. I checked the fence for square before I started shooting, and after. The fence held very well:

Checking fence for square.

The Evenfall shooting board has accessories. I also bought the double-high fence (it comes with its own attachment hardware):

Accessories for the shooting board.

Notice the angled cut on the back side of the fences? The fences can be reversed, for angle cuts – pretty neat! And each is adjustable within a 5-degree range, very handy when shooting boards that will go into areas not quite square, such as moldings. And Made in the USA is a great thing, too, as part of the amazing revival of makers of hand tools. In case you are wondering about the features and specifications of the boards, I invite you read more on the Evenfall Studios page. And if you wish to buy one, you can place an order at the Evenfall online Store.

My Hint of the Day: Adjusting the hand plane iron for use on the shooting board (or just about any other use).

I know I have seen the following somewhere, but simply cannot put my finger where. Use a narrow strip of a softer wood; make sure only one corner contacts the sole and the blade. Now run the piece of wood across the blade from the toe toward the heel, near the corners of the iron, and at the center:

Checking iron depth of cut.

The result: You should have three very thin, almost identical shavings at each location, near the corners, and near the center:

Nice, thi8n shavings across the iron.

How do I like the shooting Evenfall board? My answer is that I just love it. I am certain it will become entrenched in my woodworking habits, as I integrate hand tools in the shop over time. I can’t wait to try my hand at miters! I will probably send one of my spare (old) hand planes to a shop for squaring, and to have a handle put on it. Or maybe I will try making one from some of the Osage Orange Sandy has near her lathe, since I already have the large iron from Brese Plane.

Disclosure: I am strictly a user of the Evenfall shooting board, and have no commercial or other ties with Evenfall Studios.

— Al Navas

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