Photos. Birbs. Wood. Food.

Forge Table – #3 Cleaning up the top

This morning I decided it was time to get the top of the table a little closer to done. I started by sawing off the excess on the ends.

Trimming the end of the table-top with a hand-saw

Next up was scrubbing across the grain to even out the slight undulations where I had clamped the board together. Forgot to take a photo. Oops!

Once that was done, I started drilling the holes for the legs. I want them to go through the center of the battens, about two inches from the edge of the table. They're going to be straight vertical, with some sort of stringers, so the holes were pretty easy, except for the fact that my ¾ inch auger has a soft wood lead screw on it, and will split oak if I don't drill a 3/16 pilot hole first. I got reminded of that the hard way when the batten cracked on the first hole I drilled. Oh well. Squirt a little glue into the crack and it shouldn't affect the strength.

Bit and brace sitting on the upside-down table-top with two large holes drilled through the battens and the top, and two smaller pilot holes drilled in the other end of the battens

Top of the table, with all four leg-holes drilled

Next was chamfering the top. Low angle jack plane for this, end grain first, then the long grain sides next. That pretty well cleans up the blow outs.

End-grain of the table-top, with the top of the table chamfered

Then a quick pass with the smoothing plane with the grain on the top.

Table-top right-side-up, with a smoothing plane sitting on it

It's looking pretty good, but I've got a little gap in one of the seams. Let's jam it full of the wood filler I've got sitting out from after repairing some of the trim on the house. It's a “light oak” color, so it'll be close enough, right? Plus, as Duck pointed out, I should probably put a piece of plate over the top of the table to protect it from heat. But if I end up using it for something other than holding the forge, I might want it prettier, so let's clean it up now while it's easy to do so.

top of the table with some wood-filler in one of the seams


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