Its been a long time getting here, but the shop is now "pegboard free" - wahoo! Ive talked about this before, how I think pegboard has its place, but how I much prefer real wood.
When I was first setting up the shop it looked like this:
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Well, one panel at a time, Ive slowly replaced the pegboard. The first up-grade was to the saw panel, then the drilling/boring panel *. Now it was time to tackle the largest and most random of the panels - the one in the center that was a mishmash of tools - some chisels, files and rasps, punches, mallet, knives, snips, squares etc.
I was just going to pull the pegboard from the frame and replace it with tongue and groove 1x12s. I started that process by slicing open the bottom of the frame with a slitting gauge. Then my apprentice, Teague, helped me slide the pegboard out of the frame.
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The first of the new panels would be for the layout tools. It was made the same choice Ive made the other panels, so I wont go into great detail on the process, but here is a brief photo summary.
First, the Stanley #48 was used to create the tongue and groove joints:
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Using a moulding sample to decide which bead size I wanted to use to make the joint look better as it expands and contracts over the course of the seasons:
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*Okay, I guess I should read my own blog more often - then I would have remembered that I used the wooden T&G planes and that they worked better...sheesh. Oh, and to answer the question I asked at the end of the boring/drilling post - "No. More like soon as in almost two years!"
Categories:
Woodworking