by BMac » Fri Feb 29, 2008 8:33 pm
I might have missed this idea already posted here ... but for you that are trying to define a plane for the bearing edge using sanding boards and sidewalks and such ... I recommend a hand plane. Planes define planes. That's what planes do.
I've gone the sanding board route ... I never thought of an approach so rough as a sidewalk but that's an innovative and inexpensive solution. What I've found, as some have mentioned, is that the piece, whether its a drum or box or a board or whatever, tends to wobble as you move it trying to sand it. So you get uneven results.
So I finally got around to going to a nice specialty hardware store to buy a fine hand plane. I had seen you could spend hundreds of dollars on a single plane. A gentleman there asked me about my needs and suggested a $35 Stanley model with some sharpening accessories. I got everything for well under $60. The guy convinced me that the less expensive model, with proper care and set up, would work as well as beautiful costlier models. He said the main difference performance-wise was just that the craftsmen that make the finer models take the time to sharpen the blade properly and polish the base. He said the price difference was really more about beauty. People get freaky about their hand planes. Oh well, I suppose they think we freaky about our drums. So, if you're interested in hand planing, get some info and take some time (an hour or two) setting up the hand plane properly. Once it's set up, it will stay sharp and ready to go for a long time.
I had put off trying a plane because the ones I had tried before were bummed up and dull and chipped ... you gotta treat a hand plane right. Don't drop it ... don't bang it around in your tool box. But if they're treated right ... they're amazing.
That hand plane has become one of my most used tools. I haven't touched a sand-paper board since. The precision of a hand plane over a home-made sanding board is dramatic. How flat is flat? A hand plane can get flat as flat as flat gets.
I've fine-tuned several drums with that hand plane. You can't define the inside bevel of course. But you can establish an absolutely planar top bearing edge. You can also define the outside bevel to whatever precision your hands and patience can deliver. Move the plane circumferentially around the edge. You gotta set the blade depth shallow and work slowly because you're crossing the end grain. Don't get agressive, it'll just bite and drag and chew. With a hand plane, you can get far more precise results than with a palm sander or sanding board on both the top edge and the outside bevel.
Try it ... you'll like it!
As far as cracks go ... some say that closing a crack transfers or re-instates the stress that caused the crack, so the stress may one day re-open the crack or cause a new one. Also, glues dry as they harden ... they withdraw ... losing moisture to the air. So a crack filled with wet glue tends to cavitate and re-open as the glue dries. Here's my solution: use epoxy. I use a two-part West System epoxy. Goo that epoxy into a crack, replinishing or containing the epoxy as necessary as it tries to flow out. Epoxy doesn't dry ... it cures. The resin and hardener are mixed in a stoichiometrically correct ratio to form a hard binding solid without shrinkage or evaporation, so the the crack stays filled, if the epoxy stays put, as the epoxy cures.
The epoxy flows into wide cracks and can be worked into narrow cracks with dental floss. In some situations I've used tape to contain the epoxy. You can apply tape to the outside of a cracked drum, lay the thing down on the cracked side, and pour epoxy into the crack from inside of the drum ... letting the tape contain the epoxy from below, the crack acts like a trough with the tape being the bottom of the trough. Sometimes I let the first application cure and add more epoxy in a second or third application to completely fill a crack. It may not be the best professional repair, you don't get good wood-on-wood contact, but epoxy makes for quick and strong repairs any hobbyist can apply without belts or jigs or clamps.
I've applied epoxy repairs to several drums having cracks of several inches in length and under. I haven't repaired a big long drum-splitting crack like you see in the link someone suggested above. But for small repairs, you can just fill the crack with epoxy, sand off the excess after curing is complete, refinish the affected area, and play the drum!
Oh yeah, those warnings about heat build-up in big epoxy batches ... that's for real ... the curing process is a polymer-chain-building exothermic reaction ... you can make fire ... no doubt ... don't toss that excess cup of mixed epoxy in the waste backet ... you can burn down your house with epoxy! ... I've set off smoke alarms ... oops!
Cheers
BMac
Edited By BMac on 1204319713