WVBill
Veteran Member
Wife wants to replace the kitchen table. I can build one, I say.
I built a pretty nice coffee table and end table set out of Ash several years ago so I figured I'd give the kitchen table a try.
Then, while mowing the grass the other week, I noticed the 4' long X 16" diam log of Black Locust left over from one of the trees that blew down during our "almost tornado" in July.
I have a good 16" chain saw but no Alaskan mill or anything.
I was thinking of spiking a 2X? to the log and using it as a guide for my chain saw to slice the log into, maybe 4" thick boards then re-saw them on my 10" band saw in the shop down to 6/4 to make boards for my table top.
Do I have any chance of success in "freehanding" the milling of the log?
Thoughts?
I built a pretty nice coffee table and end table set out of Ash several years ago so I figured I'd give the kitchen table a try.
Then, while mowing the grass the other week, I noticed the 4' long X 16" diam log of Black Locust left over from one of the trees that blew down during our "almost tornado" in July.
I have a good 16" chain saw but no Alaskan mill or anything.
I was thinking of spiking a 2X? to the log and using it as a guide for my chain saw to slice the log into, maybe 4" thick boards then re-saw them on my 10" band saw in the shop down to 6/4 to make boards for my table top.
Do I have any chance of success in "freehanding" the milling of the log?
Thoughts?