Merry Christmas to all WoodWorkers

Hi everyone. And by everyone, I mean one. (follower that is). Just a quick note to say Merry Christmas to all. And to all, happy woodworking.

My garage shop is too cold at the moment to do any work and the busyness (is that a word?) of the season has curtailed my adventure in woodworking. I hope to get back at it with an update on my shop vac enclosure and other fine works early in the new year. However, I may have to learn how to work with thick gloves on to combat the cold.

See you all next year.

Chris

A New Project

Welcome to the next post on my journey into my www (wonderful world of woodworking).  I am in the process of building a cabinet/ tool bench to house my shop vac to reduce the noise.  I am modifying plans that I found on that other www (world wide web), to be a bit bigger to accommodate a dust cyclone that will reduce the amount of dust collected in the shop vac and make it easier to get rid of off the sawdust.

I purchased the wood needed and cut it down to the size for the cabinet.  I did not have to change the thickness of this wood, so not as many toothpicks this time.  The plans I am following require that I rout out some channels that the sides will sit in.  I thought, no problem.  I have a router and have it installed in a section of my table saw, so I would be able to use the table’s fence to ensure that the channels are set to the correct depth and are nice and straight and parallel.   I started on the top section to rout out the first channel.  No problem, everything worked as planned.  Then I switched to the bottom panel to create the same channel.  
 
My first pass was not as neat as the top one.  So I ran it through again.  I looked at it and noticed that I wasn’t getting a consistent depth, which resulted in a third pass.  I should mention that the depth of the channel is set so I can’t go too deep.  Finally, I made a third pass putting what I thought was the right pressure on the piece of wood as it went over the router bit.  Everything was great until I got to the end of the board.  Then I realized that I should have supported the board on the long end instead of just holding it.  This resulted in the wood changing direction.  My perfect pass now looks like a squiggly line that a kid would draw with a crayon.  My only saving grace is that the depth of the squiggly line was perfect.  If only the sides of the cabinet were squiggly.  Luckily I can flip the board over and hide it on the bottom.  
 
I don’t consider this a failure.  This is what some would call a “teachable moment”.  So I will take it as such and support the long end of the wood when I get back to working on it.  I am sure that this is far from my last teachable moment as I progress.   
 
BTW, there are technical terms for the channels and other things I described above, but I have no idea as to what they are.  Maybe  the deeper I get into the www these terms will be at the tip of my fingers and someone who is fully ensconced in the www will stop laughing and understand what I am trying to say.  
 
I will post pictures of the finished product when I get there.  Seeing as I started this project about 2.5 weeks ago, the finished product maybe a long, long way away.  
 
Until the next time.  (I really should come up with a catch phrase for ending my posts).