My machinist friend Brian and I collaborated on a coffee table for his new place. I ended up reusing the table top from a previous project - the Lathe Table.
The as built dimensions are roughly 24" wide by 48" long and 18" tall. The table top is 1-1/2" thick (8/4 repurposed wood planed to 1.540" thick) and the total weight is about 80 pounds; jatoba is ridiculously heavy. These are the process and final photos. |
Initial drawings for the aluminum legs. The idea is for the pins to expand by driving wooden wedges into the slots similar to how an axe or hammer handle is attached. |
Orthographic drawings done in Rhino and Illustrator. |
These next few images are the mock-up leg that Brian produced. |
The wedge that gets pounded in is made of jatoba. It's about twice as hard as oak and 1/3 more dense. |
Testing the ability of the wedge to expand the aluminum pins. |
It worked but in the end the pins got longer, thinner, and drafted (thicker at the top) to provide more ability to expand outwards. |
Repurposing the old table top. |
Bye bye bad craft. |
End grain doesn't glue up well so I added some simple splines. It also lines up the wood better so that you don't waste as much material in the planer. |
I added a domino joint (mortise and tenon) just because. |
Dual end grain spline joint. |
The router fitted with a follow bit; it's essentially a bearing at the tip of the bit that follows a template. |
Cutting the ends flush. The shop is used by students so all the blades have gunk on them which leads to burns on harder woods, so - more finishing work. |
This one turned out well. The first one was difficult though. 1-1/2" of extremely hard wood is a lot to take off at once. |
The material I used for the template was too thin and poor quality so my router bit crushed it a bit and my mortises came out about 15-18 thousands too large - which actually turned out to be okay. |
This is a Domino machine made by Festool. They're about $1,000 new... really want one. You can build anything with one of these. |
These are the beechwood (similar to oak) tenons that along with glue join two pieces of wood. |
This is the result of me cutting the table in half to line up the two halves more closely; it worked out really well. |
Re-gluing... |
Almost perfectly flush this time. |
The corners had to be hand chiseled out to be made square. |
I had to flip it over so that the final cuts wouldn't cause tear out on the bottom. This led to cutting 32 (4x4x2) corners square. |
This is the EDM (electrical discharge machining) my friend Brian used to cut the tops of the legs... to within "roughly" 100,000th of an inch. (The next seven photos are Brian's). |
End milling a taper to the legs. They start out as 2" by 1-1/8" by 18" tall and at the base they're 1-1/8" square. |
Just under 0.251", not bad. |
The pins are about 1-1/2" long and vary in thickness from 3/32" to 1/8". |
Flush cutting the wedges. I did a first finish coat for some dumb reason... the saw and general mess screwed up the finish so I had to strip and start again. |
Detail shot of the top of the leg. |
Finishing the legs took forever. |
Glue and grim... |
I ended up putting a coat of poly on the legs so they wouldn't soak in oil from peoples hands. |
All the final shots were taken in Crown Hall. |
This is a rendering to show how the legs work. |