Members Parfektionisto Posted February 21, 2021 Author Members Report Posted February 21, 2021 On 2/9/2021 at 12:23 AM, sandmanred said: The Consew was purchased rusted solid on a sketchy home built table with rusty steel legs and a rough plywood top. I scrapped the top and got a solid core door slab and remodeled the steel from simple square design to a trestle with better knee clearance. The foot pedal was a leftover from a 132K6 foot lift that I removed and replaced with a knee lift. The Pfaff is in a table I made using 2 layers of plywood and a laminate top and an aluminum base. I had 2 inch square aluminum leftover from another project and only had to buy a few more feet to make this base. I thought the full width foot pedal was a good idea at the time but now that I've had it for awhile I don't think it's any better than a normal one. The table end showing in the last picture has large wooden pads with those plastic glides attached. The makes it's fairly easy to slide it around the room if needed. That’s great. You seems to be good in metal work. Quote
Members Parfektionisto Posted February 21, 2021 Author Members Report Posted February 21, 2021 On 2/9/2021 at 8:32 AM, stelmackr said: This is the picture of my broken table that those 4by8 foot sheets of 3/4 inch plywood in the background caused when they fell. This was the rebuild with use of those 3/4 inch plywood sheets, hardboard with oak trim and angle iron supports Nice and neat, another more decades to go:) Quote
Members Parfektionisto Posted February 21, 2021 Author Members Report Posted February 21, 2021 On 2/8/2021 at 11:30 AM, Uwe said: @sandmanred Love those welded aluminum legs and that huge pedal on your table! @Parfektionisto There’s different approaches. If the wood itself looks nice and isn’t bowed, you can just sand it down and give a few coats of clear varnish. If you don’t like the wood look you can glue on a new layer of laminate like @Doxnet did. I’d use a hand-held trim router and a laminate trim bit to follow the contours of the inner cutout and the outside edge. To finish the edge itself, you can get some T-molding. Buy the T-molding a bit wider than the actual table edge. Use a T-molding router bit, you can cut a slot along the outer edge, install the the T-molding and the cut off the overhang with a sharp knife. Here's an example of a table I made this way. Mine used new plywood, but there's no reason you can't use this approach with an existing plywood table top. Awe your technical skill set and knowledge is always helpful and produce stunning result. Quote
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