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Time
to empty the shop vac. It's interesting to see the different layers of
debris in the bucket -- I could recognize each project by the wood chips
and dust encountered as I dug through the pile. Don't ask what got sucked
up that required me to look through this pile. I don't see why she was
so upset about that ring in the first place. Humph.
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Framing
for the window. Everything is just friction-fit at this point. I ended
up scrapping the horizontal pieces shown here and cutting new ones. The
windows are now framed so that the face of the framing is in line with
the outside edge of the vinyl window frame. This will give me lots of
room to position the finish framing. The finish framing will fit flush
to the window opening, or there may be a slight reveal of the vinyl frame
-- I've not decided yet.
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A view
of the framing around the ductwork. The outside wall is made up of 2×2
studs and track. Steel L-channels along the outside wall and wood stud
wall provide an attachment point for the 2×2 "joists".
This arrangement gives a strong and stable framework with a minimum of
height loss between the bottom of the framing and the floor. Note the
resilient channel attached to the wood stud wall.
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Another
view of the duct framing, showing the "wall" framed with 2×2
studs and track. The wall is 11" tall. I assembled all of the "wall"
sections for this framing on the floor and then lifted them up into place.
Checking the height and level with a water level showed that I was pretty
close on the first try, but some of the studs needed to be undone and
cut a bit shorter to compensate for uneveness in the ceiling joists. At
least that's my story.
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A view
of the duct framing at the front of the room. I don't think this shows
the final installation. The gap at the left of the duct wall and the arrangement
around the cold air return inlet at right made me dismantle this setup
and move everything to the left one or two inches. I have to say that
I came to really appreciate steel framing when I had to do this sort of
thing -- changes like this were very easy to make, even when working alone.
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A lot's
been done that was not photographed: wiring, fresh Pink Itch and drywall.
It's just as well the drywalling was not photographed -- it got pretty
ugly. The 24" door in the back of the room will lead to a bathroom or
closet. All the bathroom doors in our house are 24", so I used that size
here, too.
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A view
of the duct enclosure. The duct bulkhead was framed with 2×2 steel studs
and track. Steel L-angle attaches the framing components to the wall.
The cornerbead seen here is regular drywall cornerbead. I did not like
the way it looked, especially at the corners, so it was removed. I used
paper-and-steel-strip cornerbead tape and applied it when taping and mudding.
Handling the 12-foot long piece of paper cornerbead was actually easier
than expected.
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Extra
not pretty: the walls after taping and mudding, before sanding. As you
can tell by looking at the back wall, we really had no idea what we were
doing when we were driving the drywall screws. By the time we worked around
to the left-hand wall, we seemed to be a bit better at it. The left-hand
wall is a load bearing wood-stud wall. I installed resilient channel (perpendicular
to the studs) on 16" centres on the wall and attached the drywall to the
channels. Sighting down the channels, one could see noticeable dips and
bows as the faces of the wood studs were not perfectly aligned. The channels
seemed to have evened this out, though -- the installed drywall is nice
and straight.
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Looking towards the front of the room after the first coat of mud. Do not ask about that 16" strip of drywall to the left. Just... do not... ask. Ok... since you ask: I screwed up on the 16" spacing of the studs. As drywalling approached the window, we realised that the edge of a sheet was going to fall in an awkward place: it would be right at (or very close to) the corner of the window. I suspected that a joint at the corner of the window would crack, so I wanted to avoid that and centre the joint under the window. We looked at different ways of hanging the drywall here and everything seemed awkward: the drywall joints would fall either at the corner of the window, just before the inside corner at the closet wall, or perhaps in the very short wall in the closet itself. I wanted solid drywall at the corners of the window and straight-forward joints in the closet, so we opted for the 16" strip of drywall in the middle of the room. It required some careful taping, mudding, and sanding -- and then some careful repairs after I messed things up the first time -- but now that it's done and painted, it looks just fine. |
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Again,
a lot more stuff has been done that's not been photographed, but this
is where we are in late March 2004. After taping and mudding, several
joints developed problems -- cracks -- and I got very discouraged with
the whole thing and was avoiding the project. I repaired some of the larger
problems and my wife tackled the others and put up the paint. The room
does not look this dark in person -- the apparent darkness is due to a
poor choice of camera settings.
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Looking towards the front of the room. All of the trouble spots are in this end of the room, and all of the problems are due to errors on my part. There were a few spots where the drywall joints are cut edges butted together. Because tape would produce a bulge at those joints, I did not use tape there -- I just filled the joint as one would fill a crack. These spots, without fail, failed: they cracked as soon as the mud was dry. The main problems occured over the closet door and at that 16" strip of drywall about which I told you not to ask. Here's what we ended up doing: scored the drywall paper on either side of the joint with a utility knife and a straightedge; peeled the paper and mud from the drywall; used a rasp to remove the last of the paper and create a shallow trough in the gypsum; then properly taped and mudded the joint. Essentially, we created a depression similar to what you get when you join drywall at two factory edges. This has worked very well -- it was messy and looked awful at first, but the finished joints are indistinguishable from the factory-edge joints. With the paint up, the walls look just fine. Lessons learned: tape every joint; avoid cut-edge joints if possible. |
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While
I was avoding work on the room, I started to put this together. Like the
room, the router table has taken far longer than it should have, but it
is coming along. The base is a copy of Lee
Valley's Veritas stand -- 3/4" plywood parts held together with
threaded rods and bolt
caps.
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The
top is two sheets of 3/4" MDF with Formica top and bottom and holds
a JessEm
RoutRLift FX, which will, in turn, hold a Porter Cable 690. The top
is awaiting some maple trim and a fence based on one of the many designs
found in ShopNotes.
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The opening. This took absolutely forever to get right, and I went through a lot of 1/4" MDF while experimenting with this. I started by making a copy of the RoutRLift plate with a flush-cutting bit. Using the copy and Lee Valley's Inlay Set, I tried to make a template to cut the opening for the plate. I was unable to make an accurate template this way. Perhaps my router bit was not precisely centred in the inlay guide, or errors accumulated as I was cutting from a copy of the original plate, or I just messed up. The two templates I tried to cut this way were undersized and there seemed to be no accurate and measurable way to fix them. I then tried to make a template by drilling out the 3/4" radius corners with a 1 1/4" Forstner bit and joining the holes with straight lines. This sort of worked, but I found it very difficult to position the Forstner bit accurately -- my corners ended up offset from the tangents, so there were noticeable gaps when the plate was installed in a test piece. Realising that I could burn through a whole whack of test material if this continued, I admitted defeat and went out and bought JessEm's template. And a new 1/2" bit. And a 3/4" template guide. It seems to have worked very well: |