Saw Blade Purgatory

I got the last of the shelves made for the kitchen cabinets and Tina was able to get them finished.  So at least she was able to get things put away in the kitchen.  We do not have doors for the cabinets yet, but shelves are a HUGE improvement.

We also need to get some more shelf pins because we bought out all the stock that Homie Despot had and we still need about 14 more packages.

But hey, we can see the countertops for the first time in two weeks.  That is a big victory for both of us.

Then we discovered another cabinet needing a shelf that we had both forgotten about.  Oh well, we have plenty of material left.

For me, my plan was to cut the tile we wanted to use for the baseboard in the master bathroom and get it installed.  The tile is the same tile we used for the floor, but I wanted to cut it to be 4 inches wide rather than 6 and use a schluter to cover the unfinished edge.  Of course, I decided to do this on Easter Sunday and the very first piece I cut, I burned up the tile saw blade to the point it was red hot and throwing off pieces of liquid steel at me.  Bad plan.

Monday we went and picked up a new tile saw blade and also picked up the flooring for my office.  The guest bedroom will also be done with the same flooring as my office, but we did not get that as we have no place to store it until we get some of the other rooms completed.

The flooring had to “acclimate” for a couple days before I installed it, so I got the baseboard installed in the master bathroom.

Tina obliged to grout it in the next few days which I am eternally grateful for as I am about done in with tile and grout.

I started on the built-in bookshelves in my office.  These babies are going to be a full 8 feet high and almost 9 feet long, so I decided to built them in 3 sections.  I am building the carcasses in my workshop, but will have to build the face frame and assemble them completely in my office because they will not fit completely assembled, through the door.

Because they are so big, I am having to cut the panels and cut the dados for the top, bottoms and sides by hand.  That is not fun, to say the least.

Because they will be built-in and there is no way our kids will be able to get them out of the room when Tina and I have assumed room temperature, I decided to build them using cabinet style construction, with oak plywood and solid oak face frames rather than heirloom quality solid oak construction.  That saves me about $1500 and it will look okay, but not heirloom quality.  Oh well…

Note to kids: Any books behind glass or housed in an obvious heirloom quality bookcase should not be given away or sold for 25 cents each.  Anything in the cheap-o built-ins, just get rid of it.

I also got the “cookie drawer” done.

As you may recall from a previous post, the cookie drawer was an afterthought.  I had not planned on building it, but I found some space in a cabinet and needed to figure out what to do with it; hence the cookie drawer.  By the time I figured out that I needed to build the cookie drawer, I had already ordered all of the drawer glides that I needed for the kitchen and bathrooms.  But I had some cheap, crappy drawer glides from homie despot that I had bought (and not used for obvious reasons) for out kitchen in Minnesota.

As soon as I tried to install the drawer into the crappy drawer glides, the glides literally exploded.   They shot berings and crap everywhere.  So I bought some decent 100# drawer glides from the company I bought the rest of my drawer glides from, they worked perfect once I got past the holes I had drilled for the crappy glides.  It does not sound like much of a task, but it was a serious pain in the neck to install 24 inch drawer glides once the cabinet was (almost) completed.

Finally, the flooring for my office acclimated enough to install it.  The first step was to put in the vapor barrier and a thin foam pad.

Then the flooring.

The flooring is commercial grade.  It is about 1/2 inch thick and made from some kind of dense black material.  It is supposed to be waterproof for up to 30 hours.  I found out, after we bought it, it is the same flooring many of the Cabela’s stores have, so hopefully it will hold up.

Installing it was extremely easy.  I was able to get the entire floor in my office done in about 4 hours.

The downside (there is always a downside) was that it absolutely destroyed my saw blades.  I had a $90 blade in my mitre saw that was almost brand new and after I had cut the flooring, it will not even cut red oak without burning it.  I am going to try cleaning the blade and see if that helps, otherwise I will have it resharpened.  I really do not want to replace it.  I also used the rip blade in my tablesaw for a few pieces.  I have not tried it with wood yet, but I expect it is going to also need some work.

The lesson I took away from the whole exercise is that when I do the floor in the guest bedroom, I am going to get a cheap throw-away blade for my Skilsaw and cut them with that.

 

One comment on “Saw Blade Purgatory
  1. Eve says:

    All looks great and I love your office floor – lovely. But what’s all this planning for posterity?? Surely you plan at least 30 years of use out of this lovey house???

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