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eenie meenie's grand prize table is home!
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Clay Q
Posts: 4,486
We have a winner!!! Eggstatic is the word. :woohoo:
eenie meenie has fun building her new table at home.
Got her new small egg in the table and this sweet setup is ready to cook. This is taking the egg experience up a couple of levels. I cannot think of a more deserving egghead. Wishing many joyful cooks to eenie meenie!
That evening she cooked up a fantastic dinner for us! She is the MASTER of the flames. More pic's to follow.
eenie meenie has fun building her new table at home.
Got her new small egg in the table and this sweet setup is ready to cook. This is taking the egg experience up a couple of levels. I cannot think of a more deserving egghead. Wishing many joyful cooks to eenie meenie!
That evening she cooked up a fantastic dinner for us! She is the MASTER of the flames. More pic's to follow.
Comments
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Even his sawdust is art...
Congratulations.
Spring "Sawdusty Toes" Chicken
Spring Texas USA -
Congrats on the win!!!! The egg looks awesome in its new table...
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Alright Rebecca, you have to invite the Jungle Jim's crew for dinner :P :woohoo:
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Clay what masterful woodworking. The table is a work of art!Large, small and mini now Egging in Rowlett Tx
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Spring Chicken,
I wanted to share some of my ideas on the table with you before I went down to Florida but I was working day and night and there was no time. Sorry. On the way home I was reassessing my priorities and I've got to slow down. I would like your opinion on some new ideas for a large table. After I clean up our downed trees I'll send you an e-mail. Work, work, work. :( -
WOW! That table is gorgeous Clay and I agree it couldn't have gone to a nicer egghead.
Congratulations Rebbeca, that rig couldn't ask for a better home.
Blair
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Hahaha Clay, I beat you by a few minutes on the post, lol.
I can't help but constantly look out the window at your piece of art. Right now it is raining and the table is covered. At least it's not snowing.
I can not thank you enough for making and even delivering the egg table.
Grazie Mille! -
It was my pleasure. :cheer:
I'm going to set up my French easel today and pull down a few of my oil painting books by Gregg Kreutz. I'm energized.
I'll shoot you mail on table maintenance and oiling sometime soon. -
your table found a perfect home. a more appreciative owner could not be found.
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You've got that right Bill!!
I spent most of my money on good bourbon, and bad women...the rest, I just wasted!! -
bill and Chubby, it certainly has found a loving and appreciative home!
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I do not know about anyone else there, but my and Neils ears are STILL ringing from her screams!! :woohoo: she might have been one of the shortest eggers there but every leap she took to get to Tim to claim her egg and table put her about a foot over the tallest there!
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I think the term is "pogo sticking". :woohoo: "bong" :woohoo: "bong" :woohoo: "bong" :woohoo:
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Clay that was very nice of you & that table a work of art, BTW we call the MASTERS of the flames Pyromaniacs here. :laugh: :woohoo:
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"Pryomaniacs"....kinda catchy. I like it. :laugh:
When I first meet eenie meenie she was tossing Korean beef ribs on Flapoolman's egg at the after party last year and she handled the flames (that shot up a foot tall) like a pro. I was immediately impressed.
Thanks for your kind words about my table. -
You're a heck of an artist Clay!! I bow to you.Molly
Colorado Springs
"Loney Queen"
"Respect your fellow human being, treat them fairly, disagree with them honestly, enjoy their friendship, explore your thoughts about one another candidly, work together for a common goal and help one another achieve it."
Bill Bradley; American hall of fame basketball player, Rhodes scholar, former U.S. Senator from New Jersey
LBGE, MBGE, SBGE , MiniBGE and a Mini Mini BGE -
Be happy to share your ideas if you will share one or two with me. I'm looking for ideas on how to make corrugated tin to 1/12th scale to go on my 1/12th scale model of the Chicken Coop. Here's the link to the YouTube video.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zfwq7NiTF64
I already tried buying some but the only thing even close was 1/24th scale roofing for model railroad buildings. It's too small and too thin for what I need.
I'll have to make it myself and not being a metal crafter I'm stuck between two 2 X 4's with nothing to bend.
Spring "Cheep Ideas Expressed Real Cheep" Chicken -
excuse me for butting in, but does it have to be metal? Could you use plastic and just paint it silver? Not that I have an idea for sure, but I think I've seen corrugated sheets like that "somewhere"!Re-gasketing America one yard at a time.
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Thats an amazing looking table!!
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Good timing... I just sent you an email.
Spring "Timing And Location Is Everything Except Sometimes It Doesn't Work" Chicken -
And a most extraordinary piece of art it is! You're a real genius, Clay!
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First idea that comes to mind; Press to shape soft tin between two boards of hardwood. Glue up flat stock hardwood (such as maple or oak) 4 pieces of 3/4" thick by 6" x 6". This will give you a block 6" x 6" x 3" thick. Draw your desired 1/12 scale radius of roofing profile down the middle on the block edge and then cut into two pieces with a fine blade in your bandsaw following the line you have drawn. Soft sheet tin with a thin enough gauge can be pressed formed. I'm thinking C clamps will do the job or a large bench vice. Would be fun to somehow secure and align the 'sandwich' of wood blocks and then drive over the blocks with your truck to press form the tin. :woohoo:
If you require a larger sheet of roofing you can press form in stages across the tin. You can adapt this idea to the dimensions you need. Anyway, it's my first thought. -
I tried something similar using a router with a bull-nose bit. I cut two parallel grooves with a ridge in between. I laid a flat sheet of aluminum over the grooves and then I pressed a metal rod down into the grooves. The metal did not want to bend that much.
I noticed before hand that all the indentions cannot be made at one time without stretching the metal. It will have to be moved forward one 'up' groove and one 'down' groove at a time.
I used oak and it didn't do well. I suppose I could try your method but with only one 'up' and one 'down' indention, leaving the rest flat.
By the way, I only have a benchtop bandsaw.
Thanks.
Spring "Indented To You" Chicken -
outstanding design!!! looks great! ray
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I've had my coffee, I got another idea. Build a frame that will secure dowels (or pipe or rod) in a vertical position but are removable as well. The dowels match the radius of your tin roof to scale and are spaced accordingly. Insert two dowels to start on one end of the frame and then insert sheet tin between the dowels and start bending the tin by hand around the second dowel. I guess a clamp to hold the tin in place at the starting edge would be needed. This will be like basket weaving. Bend enough to be on the opposite side of the next dowel by 90 degrees. Insert next dowel over and bend around that 90 degrees in the opposite direction. Repeat.
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Hummmmmm! Might just work. I'll think on it and might just try it. Thanks...
One of my original thoughts was to split a 1/4" dowell and glue the two halves to two pieces of 3/4" MDF. I would double-hinge one side edge (mostly for stability) and then lay a sheet of thin aluminum flush with the back edge. Then I would use clamps to compress the two MDF boards togeher.
Then I would move the aluminum forward one ridge and do it again and again.
But I couldn't figure out how to split 1/4" dowells.
By then I was out of 1/4" dowells.
I keep telling myself that I just need a good jig. And asking myself, "What would Norm do?"
Spring "Try Try Try Again" Chicken -
Split a 1/4" dowel....hummmm. Tricky. By sanding. Or draw shave followed by a cabinet scraper. Or block plane with the dowel somehow secured....with double sided tape? Or hot glue?
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Good thinking....
I might just route a 1/4" groove 1/8" deep in a board, double stick tape the dowell in the groove and plane it down far enough to belt sand it the last lick. Then do another one.
I suppose if push came to shove, I could just make a bunch of half-dowells and glue them to a thin piece of model airplane plywood to make it look half way good.
Naaaaaa....
There's always another way to skin a dowell.
Thanks.
Spring "Skin And Sawdust" Chicken -
Congratulations... Very nice table!!Large and Small BGE * www.quelfood.com
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Congratulation that is a nice looking table
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