Conchita, I was so busy today I did not know if
I was coming or going! Added to that I had to take my
wife to her regular's.
Anyway first thing I did was making the current lot
go mat, as you see below.
By tommorrow, these will be ready for desptch. Here, below you
see my deck? I had to something here, too. It is a very samll deck
compared to what I have at our mountain cottage, but then,
I have my mmorning coffees here and I need a place to
put my mug on...
Fortunately, there is a pillar just for that kind...
My idea was to put a small table on top of this pillar.
Here above is such a table, upside down. Simple, but,
it takes time. Simply screwing these bars will crack
them, and that means pre-drilling, and that means
chaning the bits etc tetc...
But then, as seen above I managed to pyut it dead on!
I then moved on to something else and I had to
cut my vice into two halves.
After a good while see what emerged then...
This is meant to serve as my boots-holder squeezer. I talked
about the shearing effects of using conventional tools.
With any luck I should be able to sqeeze them, say, 20
of them in one go without shears.
Now, take a look at the following. I talked about this and
this is what I got. At a glance, you may ask what might be
the difference from the turtle.
To be honest, I am not exactly sure...
I do know I do not like this...
Anyway, I did some additinal work, re, earlier version
of butter knives. See that I have reshaped the butter blades?
I was basically, rounding the corners, and then
I realised that some of them were meta-stable, that is,
too much weight at the blade end.
All I could think of was to lose some mass there.
In fact, even this may not be enough, if you
take into account, inevitable residuals.
In fact, turtle 2 has its handle bottom receded.
This will be detrimental, too. All in all, this
self-supporting butter knife business is more
formidable than I initially thought it to be...
I was coming or going! Added to that I had to take my
wife to her regular's.
Anyway first thing I did was making the current lot
go mat, as you see below.
By tommorrow, these will be ready for desptch. Here, below you
see my deck? I had to something here, too. It is a very samll deck
compared to what I have at our mountain cottage, but then,
I have my mmorning coffees here and I need a place to
put my mug on...
Fortunately, there is a pillar just for that kind...
My idea was to put a small table on top of this pillar.
Here above is such a table, upside down. Simple, but,
it takes time. Simply screwing these bars will crack
them, and that means pre-drilling, and that means
chaning the bits etc tetc...
But then, as seen above I managed to pyut it dead on!
I then moved on to something else and I had to
cut my vice into two halves.
After a good while see what emerged then...
This is meant to serve as my boots-holder squeezer. I talked
about the shearing effects of using conventional tools.
With any luck I should be able to sqeeze them, say, 20
of them in one go without shears.
Now, take a look at the following. I talked about this and
this is what I got. At a glance, you may ask what might be
the difference from the turtle.
To be honest, I am not exactly sure...
I do know I do not like this...
Anyway, I did some additinal work, re, earlier version
of butter knives. See that I have reshaped the butter blades?
I was basically, rounding the corners, and then
I realised that some of them were meta-stable, that is,
too much weight at the blade end.
All I could think of was to lose some mass there.
In fact, even this may not be enough, if you
take into account, inevitable residuals.
In fact, turtle 2 has its handle bottom receded.
This will be detrimental, too. All in all, this
self-supporting butter knife business is more
formidable than I initially thought it to be...