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the breadboard ends, the splines and the way they are attached
with screws behind the plugs.
Our local wood supplier had 3"-square by 30"-long leg blanks
in stock, so I decided to purchase eight of them instead of milling
my own out of^12 ⁄ 4 material. You might need to glue up the leg
blanks from two or more pieces to get the thickness of 2^3 ⁄ 4 ".
The rest of the material all has a finished thickness of^7 ⁄ 8 "
except for the breadboard ends, which are a full 1" thick. I had
wood that was long enough to make all of the top rails out of
one piece and all of the bottom rails out of the other. I kept them
in order to match grain and color around the entire table, which
adds a nice touch.
Which Leg is Which?
After laying out all of the legs and rails for grain direction and
orientation, I numbered each leg on the plan view of my draw-
ing, and wrote the number on the top of each leg to keep them
in order as the work progressed. I also marked each end of the
rails with the number of the leg it joined to.
My fi rst task was to fi nd an effi cient way to cut all the mor-
tises. Instead of using a hollow chisel mortiser, I decided to use a
plunge router along with a template to quickly locate all of the
cuts.
More Mortises per Hour
The fence for the plunge router was used to locate the distance
in from the edge of the leg to the mortises. In order to set the
beginning and end of each mortise, I added a sub-base to the
router as shown below, and attached a^1 ⁄2"-square block of
wood to the sub-base. This size block matched the diameter
of the bit I was using. I placed it in line with the router bit
and square to the fence. The template was made to the exact
length of the leg, with the notches cut at the end points of each
mortise. After the notches were cut, I added a stop to locate the
template at the top of each leg.
I took the four outer legs, and with a lumber crayon, marked
the general location of the mortises on adjacent corners. I
marked the four inner legs on opposite sides. These marks were
to keep straight which surfaces were to be mortised. The exact
locations of the mortises would come from the template without
my needing to locate and mark each one.
I put each leg, along with the template in my bench vise, with
the surface to be mortised facing up. I then routed the mortises,
plunging back and forth until I reached the fi nal depth of 1^1 ⁄ 4 ".
I cut all of the tenons on the rails with a jig on the table saw,
coming in^3 ⁄ 16 " from each face and^1 ⁄ 2 " from each edge to form
the tenons. I used a rasp to round off each of the tenon shoul-
ders to match the rounded ends of the mortises I routed earlier.
To make the cloud lift patterns on the center rails, I made a
template out of^1 ⁄ 2 "-thick plywood, carefully filing the inside and
outside curves at the corners. I then rough cut each of the cloud
lifts with the band saw, and used the template and a^1 ⁄ 4 "-diame-
ter flush trimming bit in the router to cut each rail to the pattern.
I fit each of the tenons, trimming with my shoulder plane, and
then made a dry run assembly of the entire base of the table.
FULL-SIZE CLOUD LIFT PATTERN
Width of leg
Leg captured
between fence and
this stop block
The small block on the sub-base is the same size as the bit, placed farther
away than the width of the leg from the fence.
The block is lined up with the bit so that the template can be made to the
exact size and location of the mortises.
Block
Stop
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