Donnerstag, 30. Juni 2011

Planes restored - Because I can. #13: Its a 4 1/2

Today, when I buy tools it will usually be for one of two reasons. The first is the obvious. I need the tool to perform a function. The second reason, not quite as understandable, I like to rehab tools. I relate it to someone stopping after running over a squirrel, and nursing it back to health. I have a need to nurse some of these tool back to health.

Hand planes are a perfect combination of usability, collectability, and rehabability. I never know what I’ll find, or what will need to be done to restore. It can range from a simple cleanup like this 4 1/2 to a total rehab, like some of the previous planes I’ve blogged about. I bought this Stanley 4 1/2 to use. I bid on several on ebay before wining this one, unlike many of the 4’s, 5’s and 6’s, most of these are already cleaned up and go for a higher price than I want to pay. I’m finding a similar situation in trying to find a #2. I’m not sure a #1 can be found in poor condition. I will keep up the hunt.

I usually look for the crappiest, dirtiest, worst condition I can find. Nursing it back to the health is half the fun. I think this next 5 1/4 was one of the worst and wound up being in the best shape. These two are in the same class. Looked really bad, but was just really dirty. Broken totes, missing knobs, even a broken frog won’t deter me.

Cleaned up it looked like this:

But back to the 4 1 /2. This looked pretty dirty, so i was not sure if the japanning needed work. Just like the 5 1/4, I was pleasantly surprised to see it was almost 100%. All it needed was a good cleaning. So if you’ve follow my previous restore blogs in this series, you’ve seen some of my other restores and often different ways of doing what needs to be done.

First I take the plane all apart. The only thing left together is the lateral adjustment lever. Trying to remove this can wind up with a broken frog pretty quick. As I can not always finish a plane in a single shop session, I have a plastic container to hold the parts. After the first or second time fishing around for screws or parts, now everything goes into the plastic tray.

Next I clean the base. I typically use WD40 to clean it up. At this point I’ll decide what I am going to do with the japanning. If the plane needs painting, I’ll need to strip it. I like the sandblasting method the best, but I also use rust remover (still haven’t found evaporust) and electrolysis. The #4 1/2 didn’t need anything painted, so it got a coat of Fluid Film.

I wire wheel all the small parts, the chip beaker and the blade.

I also polish the chip breaker at the tip. This may need sanding if its bad enough. Sand it up to 500 or 600. Even higher wouldn’t hurt. Then hit it with the polishing wheel.

The brass adjuster gets chucked in my drill press. It has already been wire brushed as much as I can. I buy the finest wire brush I can get (by finest I mean not course, not expensive). Don’t chuck it to tight or the chuck will mar the finish. You can also wrap a cloth or tape around it to protect it. I start with 220 sandpaper. Run it up to 500 to polish it

I flatten the sole. I typically do this with some sandpaper on the table saw top. If it looks really bad, I’ll take it over to the belt sander to get it close enough to work by hand.

I wire brush the sides of the base. Depending on the finish, I may sand it, again starting with 220, 320, 500.

The tote needs to be sanded by hand. I start with 120 or 150 and work my way up to 500. On this 4 1/2, I also hit it with the polishing wheel.

For the knob i have a small bolt that will fit through the hole in most knobs. I use a washer and tighten the nut. Then I chuck it in the drill press spin it, and sand it, again starting at about 120 or 150 and work my way up to 500. On this 4 1/2, I also hit it with the polishing wheel.

For both the knob and tote I then use steel wool and add a coat of BLO (boiled linseed oil) Rub vigerously with the steel wool, the wipe most of the oil with a rag. Wait a short while and add another coat. (You can also wet sand it in instead of the steel wool. Another coat in a day or two, and then a third a few days later should finish it nice.

Sharpen the blade. I haven’t worked out the besty approach. It really depends on how much it need to be ground. If you don’t have a method, I’d say the scary sharp technique is the best place to start.

Then make some shavings.


Source: http://lumberjocks.com/donwilwol/blog/24127

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28- When the Dust Settles

Time to tune up my equipment, wax the cast iron tables, touch up the chisels, and do some general cleanup.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/jYPyJLMkOpA/TheWoodWhisperer-Episode28582.mp4

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how i save space in my shop #1: my planer jointer

for those wondering how i can possibly put as many machines into my shop as i do the answer is this: its not easy. in order to have my planer in my shop and not a trip hazard i had to put it inside my jointer. it was a nightmare dealing with how i can fit my machine inside the stand of another one. i had to add an angle iron frame to the bottom of my jointer stand and couldnt just put my planer inside it directly as it was a little too tall so i had to angle it in and then put in a plywood shelf underneath it so the tables would clear the stand.

i would have just taken the stand apart but i am just not strong enough to take that cast iron jointer off to do so. i also though of taking the top off the planer but was afraid of losing the bolts with my shop in its current state of utter chaos.

i do have a few things to sort out such as extending the adjusting handle outside the stand and putting in a dust chute on my jointer so the shavings have somewhere to go but i will deal with that soon.

well enough of that here is a pic:


Source: http://lumberjocks.com/emart/blog/24105

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Welcome!

Source: http://djhconstructioninc.blogspot.com/2009/01/welcome.html

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SawStop 1.75HP Cabinet Saw with 36" rails review

SawStop 1.75HP Cabinet Saw with 36

After much contemplation, I purchased the SawStop 1.75 Cabinet Saw with 36” rails. For several years, the only table saw I ever experienced was a Delta contractor saw. So yes, SawStop is a HUGE upgrade. First, the assembly directions are extremely well done. Absolutely no problem putting this saw together, other than the Woodcraft employee who didn’t know what SawStop was and failed to give me the correct rails. Aside from that issue, I was able to assemble the saw approximately 5 1/2 hours, while spending some time just making sure everything was finely tuned. My review may sound repetitive from other SawStop reviews in that the fit and finish is exceptional. The cuts are extremely nice and I cannot say enough on how great the fence is. I admit my only experience was the Delta contractor fence but whoa I had no idea that fences can be this nice.

In essence, SawStop makes an excellent table saw and I am extremely glad with my choice.


Source: http://lumberjocks.com/reviews/2197

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Austin Energy Excels as #1 Green Energy Electricity Utility in America



UPDATE: This is a list of the top ten green energy programs in the United States with the latest December 2005 figures and links to these electric utilities. One of the biggest differences we can make is to switch to "green energy" - energy generated from 100% renewable sources. Florida Power & Light is a new entry into the top ten at number four. The company recently announced the construction of the largest solar array in Florida on the site of a closed landfill in Sarasota. The 1,200 photovoltaic solar panels are each about 31 inches wide and 63 inches long. The facility is to be more than 28,000 square feet, or about half the size of a football field. "We sought a location that had a ground site large enough for 250 kilowatts of photovoltaic panels," said Jeff Bartel, FP&L VP of external affairs.

If you live in a part of the United States that is not served by an electric utility on this list please see this Map of Green Energy Providers by State.

As our energy challenges are global I appreciate every assistance in compiling a similar list of renewable energy providers in other countries. Feel free to email or leave a comment.

Returning to the United States, Austin Energy has shown its commitment to renewable energy by topping the list. The U.S. Department of Energy said Austin Energy's Green Choice program sold more than 334 million hours of renewable energy last year.

More than 350 businesses in Austin get their power from renewable sources as an alternative to fossil fuels.

Austin Energy uses electricity from 61 West Texas wind turbines.

Here's the top ten green energy programs in the United States (as of December 2005).

1. Austin Energy -
areas served include Austin, Texas
green energy from Wind Power, Land Fill Gas, Small Hydro -
435 MWh/year

2. Portland General Electric (PGE) -
areas served include Portland, Oregon
green power from existing Geothermal, Wind Power, Small Hydro - 340 MWh/year

3. PacifiCorp - includes Pacific Power and Utah Power
areas served include:
Oregon, Washington, Wyoming, California, Utah, Idaho
green energy from Wind Power, Biomass, Solar Energy -
234 MWh/year

4. Florida Power & Light - green power from Biomass, Wind Power, Solar Energy - 225 MWh/year

5. Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) -
green power from Landfill Gas, Wind Power, Small Hydro, Solar Energy - 195 MWh/year

6. Xcel Energy -
areas served include: Denver,Colorado; Elkhart, Kansas; Wakefield, Michigan; Saint Paul, Minnesota; Roswell, New Mexico; Fargo, North Dakota; Boise City, Idaho; Sioux Falls, South Dakota; Amarillo, Texas; Eau Claire, Wisconsin
green electricity from Wind Power - 148 MWh/year

7. National Grid -
areas served include:
New York, Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Nantucket
green power from Biomass, Wind Power, Small Hydro, Solar Energy - 128 MWh/year

8. Basin Electric Power Cooperative (SMUD) -
green power from Wind Power - 114 MWh/year

9. Puget Sound Energy (PSE)-
area served Washington state
green energy from Wind Power, Solar Energy, Biogas -
71 MWh/year

10. OG&E Electric Services -
area served Oklahoma
green electricity from Wind Power - 64 MWh/year

(source: NREL)

MWh/year = million kWh/year rounded down

List of Green Energy Providers by State

One of the single biggest ways we as individuals can encourage the use of alternative energy and help aid the transition to a post fossil fuel age is to buy electricity partly, or preferably completely, generated using alternative energy.

Switching your electricity utility provider may be as simple as requesting a form or filling one in online. That's exactly how I switched to 100% renewable energy (generated mainly from wind power with some solar power and small scale hydro thrown into the mix). Renewable energy options are available throughout the U.K. and in many other countries.

To find out if you can switch to renewable energy in your area look on your search engine of choice for "green energy", "green power" or "green electricity". You may also need to add your location to the search. If your local utility doesn't provide a renewable energy option yet, email or call them and ask why.

Original News 8 Austin Article

Green-e Certified Electricity Products

Source: http://alt-e.blogspot.com/2006/04/austin-energy-excels-as-1-green-energy.html

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87 ? Dust In Time

A quick review of the dust and fumes that can make our lives miserable in the shop, and why we need respirators for pro-active protection.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/1As5lm-5xRo/TheWoodWhisperer-ep87881.mp4

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Clean Coal or Dirty Coal?

When President Bush said ?America is addicted to oil?, he could also have said that America is addicted to coal.

Most Americans are not aware of the sheer scale of current coal use in the United States. Over 50% of electricity is generated from coal with 20 pounds of coal per a person being burnt every day to generate electricity.

While questions are increasingly being raised about remaining oil and gas reserves, we are assured that there is plenty of coal left to burn. Indeed in a talk to a meeting of builders and contractors at the Capital Hilton on June 8, 2005 President Bush asked the audience,
"Do you realize we've got 250 million years of coal?"

Hopefully readers will spot this obvious gaffe. The figure quoted by the coal industry is 250 years of reserves, not 250 million years. The energy illiteracy of the average person is worrying enough, but in our political leadership it is a real cause for concern.

There are an estimated one trillion tons of recoverable coal in the world, by far the largest reserve of fossil fuel left on the planet. The United States has over 25% of the world?s recoverable coal reserves. An important point to remember when considering how many years of coal we have left is that these figures are based on current rates of consumption and do no take into account growing demand for electricity. Since 1980 coal use for power generation has increased by over 75%.

A good percentage of the coal that?s left is too dirty to be burned in conventional power plants and much of its buried in inconvenient places. In 1974 the USGS published an estimate of the recoverable reserve base at 243 billion tons. This however failed to take into account real world restrictions on mining: state and national parks, roads, towns, proximity to railroads, coal quality, losses during mining and geologic limitations. When these are factored in less than 50% of the coal estimated as ?recoverable? in the 1974 study was available for mining. This fails to taken into account how much is economically recoverable at market prices. In a 1989 study by the U.S. Bureau of Mines in Kentucky, at $30 a ton 22% of coal was economically recoverable. The author Tim Rohrbacher wrote ?a strong argument can be made that traditional coal producing regions may soon be experiencing resource depletion problems far greater and much sooner than previously thought?.

Recently there has been a rise in suggestions that America should replace its addiction to oil, with diesel fuel made from American coal. There is currently in place a Coal-to-Liquids Tax Credit of $0.50/gallon in place until 2023. The idea has been around for a long while, in the second world war it was used by the Germans to make Nazi oil from coal when their supply of normal gasoline was cut off. I remember when I first started researching peak oil I realised after awhile if things got bad that coal rich countries might turn to making Nazi oil in desperation when petroleum depletion started to bite. Of course calls to start building Coal to Liquids plants aren?t proof that petroleum depletion is well advanced, but I hardly see it as a source for optimism.


Fischer-Tropsch pilot plant

You don?t need to be an expert on coal liquefaction to realise that it?s a bad idea as this article on AutoblogGreen shows. It?s expensive, uses lots of water, produces double the carbon dioxide when compared to regular petroleum use and produces diesel when the vast majority of the U.S. car fleet runs on gasoline. Over at the Ergosphere, the Engineer Poet crunches the numbers and compares coal to liquids versus electric vehicles. He calculates that to replace the United States petroleum consumption at current rates would take 214 four billion dollar coal to liquid plants (that?s not far off a trillion dollars in investment) and the mining of an additional one and a half billion tons of coal a year, in addition to the one billion tons already being mined for electricity generation. It should be noted that the high percentage of electricity currently produced from coal is not an argument against electric vehicles, this is something I have covered in detail elsewhere on this blog. Electric motors are inherently more efficient than the internal combustion engine. It is far easier to control emissions from large power plant, than from the exhausts of thousands of cars. Electric vehicles are not reliant on one source of energy and in the longer term polluting non-renewable sources of electricity can be replaced by clean alternative energy.

The coal industry?s promotion of the idea that America has a vast reserve of coal is slowing the transition to clean renewable sources of energy. In addition to tv spots showing child actors extolling the virtues of coal, the industry has spent heavily to get the ear of the political establishment. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, Peabody Energy, the world?s largest coal company spent over 5% of its revenues on political contributions, for comparison Exxon Mobil and General Motors spent a fraction of one percent.

In seeming return for such generosity, The Energy Policy Act of 2005 included five billion dollars of subsidies for the coal industry.

Virtually every power plant built in America between 1975 and 2002 was fired by natural gas. However between 1970 and 2000, the amount of coal America used to generate electricity tripled.

Now with natural gas prices rising steeply, U.S. power utilities are expected to build the equivalent of 280 500 megawatt coal-fired electricity power plants between 2003 and 2030. China is already constructing the equivalent of one large coal burning power plant a week with two thirds of energy production coming from dirty coal. 16 of the 20 most polluted cities in the world are in China. India is the third largest producer of coal in the world, also getting over two thirds of its energy from coal. If these new coal plants are built, they will add as much carbon dioxide to the atmosphere as has been released by all the coal burned in the last 250 years.


Acid run off from coal mining

Coal?s sale price may be low, but the true costs of its extraction, processing and consumption are high. Our use of coal leads to ravaged mountains, air pollution from acidic and toxic emissions and fouled water supplies. Coal mining is massively more invasive than oil or gas drilling. Coal burning power plants account for more than two-thirds of sulfur dioxide, 22% of nitrogen oxides, nearly 40% of carbon dioxide and a third of all mercury emissions in the United States. Results of the largest mercury hair sampling project in the U.S. found mercury levels exceeding the EPA?s recommended limit of one microgram of mercury per gram of hair in one in five women of childbearing age tested. Each year coal plants produce about 130 million tons of solid waste, about three times more than all the municipal garbage in the U.S. The American Lung Association calculates that around 24,000 people a year die prematurely from the effects of coal fired power plant pollution.

Techniques for addressing CO2 emissions exist, although the will to quickly implement them lags.

The techniques electric utilities could apply to keep much of the carbon dioxide they produce from entering the atmosphere are known as CO2 capture or geological carbon sequestration. This involves separating the CO2 as it is created and pumping it underground to be stored.

Until recently I wasn?t aware that all the technological components needed for carbon sequestration are commercially ready (according to an article in September?s Scientific American magazine) as they have already been proven in applications unrelated to avoidance of climate change. However integrated systems have yet to be built on a commercial scale.

Capture technologies have been deployed extensively throughout the world both in the manufacture of chemicals (e.g. fertilizer) and in the purification of natural gas. Industry has gained experience with CO2 storage in operations to purify natural gas, principally in Canada, as well as using carbon dioxide to boost oil production, mainly in the United States.



The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) estimated in 2005 that it is highly likely that geologic locations worldwide are capable of sequestering at least two trillion metric tons of CO2 - more than is likely to be produced by fossil fuel consuming power plants this century.

Carbon sequestration is not without risk. The two main risks are sudden escape and gradual leakage of carbon dioxide. In 1986 at Lake Nyos in Cameroon, Africa carbon dioxide originating from a volcano killed over 1,700 people. However according to IPCC this is unlikely for engineered CO2 storage in carefully selected, deep porous geologic rock formations. In regard to gradual leakage the IPCC estimated in 2005 that in excess of 99% of carbon sequestered is ?very likely? to remain in place for at least one hundred years.

Studies indicate that 85%-95% of the carbon in coal could be sequestered using existing power generation technologies.



A key point is that fundamentally different approaches to carbon capture would need to be pursued for power plants using the old pulverised coal technology as opposed to the newer integrated gasification combined cycle (IGCC). IGCC plants use heat and pressure to cook off impurities in coal and convert it into a synthetic gas, this gas is then burnt in a turbine. These plants are 10% more efficient than conventional plants, consume 40% less water, produce 50% less solid waste and burn almost as cleanly as natural gas plants.

Although building IGCC power plants is slightly more expensive (10%-20%), IGCC is likely to be the most effective and cheapest option for carbon capture.

In an IGCC plant designed to capture CO2 the syngas exiting the gasifier, after being cooled and cleaned of particles, would be reacted with steam to make a gas made up mainly of CO2 and hydrogen. The CO2 would then be extracted and pumped to a storage site. The remaining hydrogen would be burned to generate more power. Captured carbon dioxide can by piped up to several hundred miles to a suitable geologic storage site.

A recent study found that for carbon capture in a saline formation one hundred kilometers from a power plant would cost an additional 1.9 cents per kilowatt-hour (over the generation cost of 4.7 cents per kilowatt-hour for a coal IGCC plant that vents carbon dioxide), making a 40% premium. With coal generation costing 6.6 cents for a kilowatt hour, this would make wind power cheaper than coal and with technology advances could also provide a boost to other renewable energy sources (e.g. concentrating solar power).

However electricity producers are rushing to build conventional coal pulverisation power plants, just as they rushed to build coal plants without sulfur scrubbers prior to legislation coming into force. This is short-sighted as it is more expensive, more energy intensive and less effective to attempt to capture carbon from conventional coal power plants. It is highly likely that having built these plants, that the coal industry would expect the taxpayer to foot the bill for the additional expense. Of the one hundred or so plants being planned or under construction in America only a handful use IGCC technology.


Proposed Design for FutureGen

FutureGen, is the Department of Energy financed one billion dollar zero emissions plant intended to turn coal into electricity and hydrogen. Proposed in 2003 and backed by a consortium of coal and electric companies, it is not due to come online until at least 2013. Many in the industry consider this date to be dubious nicknaming the project NeverGen. It is intended to make it look like the coal industry is doing something, while actually doing very little and in the process putting off changing how coal plants are built for a decade or two. Indeed in its Coal Vision report(pdf), the industry does not plan on building ?ultra-low emissions? plants on a commerical scale until between 2025 and 2035. According to the report ?there is considerable debate about the need to reduce CO2 emissions?. The report also states that ?achieving meaningful CO2 reductions would require significant technical advances?.

The report further states ?large scale and long term demonstrations of carbon sequestration technologies over a geographically and geologically diverse range of... sites are needed before making any policy decisions concerning carbon management?. The coal industry wants sequestration to be demonstrated not only in the United States but additionally ?similar assessments need to be conducted internationally?. In terms of who should pay for these demonstrations the report writes ?the government must play a significant role?.

It sounds that if the coal industry has its way, it won?t be using carbon capture for many decades.

Instead of waiting until 2013 or even 2035, the coal industry could be building IGCC power plants with carbon capture now. The rush to build conventional coal pulverisation plants is extremely short sighted as these plants could be operating for the next fifty years or more.

In the first instance I advocate maximising our use of clean renewable energy. At the moment wind power is being used to generate only 0.5% of electricity in the United States. Using existing technology wind power could cost effecively generate a significant portion of many countries electricity supply. Significant sums of money should also be invested in making solar power and wave power more cost effective, as well as investments in energy long shots such as cellulosic ethanol and fusion power. If we are going to continue to use coal as global society as a major source of energy, which seems pretty much inevitable for at least the next few decades in key countries such as the United States, China & India, then we should be building IGCC power plants with carbon capture and retiring existing dirty coal plants now. If there are unforeseen problems with carbon capture, we need to find out now rather than in a few decades time. The coal industry's business as usual attitude is simply not acceptable.

Jeff Goodell in his recent book ?Big Coal? concludes, ?coal gives us a false sense of security, if we run out of gas and oil, we can just switch over to coal? the most dangerous things about our continued dependence on coal is it preserves the illusion that we don?t have to change our thinking?.

Further Reading:
?Big Coal? by Jeff Goodell
?What to Do About Coal?? in Scientific American September, 2006

Lively Discussion of Coal to Liquids

Coal Vision by the Coal Based Generation Stakeholders Group

Mountaintop Removal

A Quick Guide to Mountaintop Removal Coal Mining

When Will Coal Production Peak?

Source: http://alt-e.blogspot.com/2006/10/clean-coal-or-dirty-coal.html

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A Little Iron Work -- Some Quick Twisted Spindles

A Little Iron Work -- Some Quick Twisted Spindles Posted by DaveRichards
This afternoon a friend asked me if I had a good way to draw twisted iron spindles similar to the one on the left in the photograph. I hadn't really thought about drawing an iron railing before but I...

Source: http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/38597/a-little-iron-work-some-quick-twisted-spindles

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Video: War Veteran Uses Solar Power

This is a nice video about an Irag war veteran who installed solar panels to save money and reduce our dependence on fossil fuels. Learn how easy and affordable it was for him to go solar. You can solar power your home for as little as $89 a month.



(c) FreeCleanSolar, Inc.

Source: http://blog.freecleansolar.com/2011/05/26/video-war-veteran-uses-solar-power.aspx?ref=rss

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82 ? Duane?s Steamer Trunk Pt. 1

Building the frames that make up the sides of the trunk case. Grain matching and tips, tricks, and overall strategy for working with plans.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/p6kJ1plS9gE/TheWoodWhisperer-ep82538.mp4

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There is hope

Perhaps the last post was unnecessarily dire or premature. �Since posting that I would have to close down Sun Volt, I have received many phone calls from various people. �These have led to a few possible business opportunities that may indeed keep things going. �Everything is tentative at the moment, if things firm up, this [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/HudsonValleySolar/~3/4WSVZhvdW2U/

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Shekay's Photo of Woodshop for Making Canes

Shekay shot this interesting photo of a woodworker building a cane in her small woodshop. Note the portable table saw and drill press in the woodshop background.

Source: http://woodworking.about.com/od/shopdesignlayout/ig/Woodshop-Photo-Gallery/Shekay-s-Cane-Woodshop-Photo.htm

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How to Make Your Roof into a Solar Water Heater ?

There are basically two very similar methods. They both use the sun to preheat the water that is then fed into your regular water heater. 1) Tanks – This is essentially a black water tank on the roof. The dark color absorbs the sun’s rays, heating the water. The advantage of using a tank system [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ResidentialSolarPanels/~3/QHbMpxlsaP4/roof-solar-water-heater

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Mittwoch, 29. Juni 2011

109 ? Birth of a Guitar (Pt. 2)

Kerfing, inlaying the tail wedge, installation of the binding, construction of the back, the soundboard, the fretboard, the bridge and error repair.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/Ty-SGuhcgtw/TheWoodWhisperer-ep109486.mp4

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California: Solar potential and current sources for our electricity generation

Source: http://solardweller.blogspot.com/2006/03/california-solar-potential-and-current.html

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55 ? Tablesaw Setup/Tuneup (Pt. 1)

Whether you are setting up a new saw, or tuning up your old one, this video guide will help you make truer and safer cuts!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/QYUlcCdUwrg/TheWoodWhisperer-ep551131.mp4

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Join Us At the Semi-Annual Virtual Energy Forum June 24-25, 2009

Source: http://djhconstructioninc.blogspot.com/2009/06/join-us-at-semi-annual-virtual-energy.html

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Woodworking Gifts Under \$150

Looking for a gift for a woodworker? Check out these five woodworking gift ideas, all of which cost less than $150. From power tools such as a jigsaw or a joiner to woodworking accessories such as a pocket hole jig or panel saw system, here you'll find an moderately-priced woodworking gift for the woodworker on your list.

Source: http://woodworking.about.com/od/recommendations/tp/GiftsUnder150.htm

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Solar Advocacy

Source: http://akeenasolar.blogspot.com/2010/08/solar-advocacy.html

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It's A Matter of Perspective

It's A Matter of Perspective Posted by DaveRichards
A week or so ago I was chatting with a new SketchUp user. He was asking if he could control the perspective in his views of his model. As it turns out there is a lot of freedom to control the...

Source: http://www.finewoodworking.com/item/38751/its-a-matter-of-perspective

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Why Going Solar Is More Affordable Now?

Source: http://djhconstructioninc.blogspot.com/2009/08/why-going-solar-is-more-affordable-now.html

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Band Saws

The band saw is not only the woodworking tool of choice for cutting precise curves, but it is versatile enough to handle a number of cuts that is typically the domain of radial arm or table saws. Learn the features to look for when choosing a band saw for your wood shop.

Source: http://woodworking.about.com/od/woodworkingmachines/p/bandsaws.htm

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How to build a Solar Oven?

You can use sun’s solar energy to build your own solar oven and anything you can cook in a conventional oven; you can cook in solar oven too. What raw materials do you need? ? Cardboard box ? scissors ? Aluminum foil ? tape ? Plastic wrap ? Black paper ? A ruler How to [...]

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ResidentialSolarPanels/~3/bA9ho1ko9CE/build-solar-oven

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Review Show #3 ? Hand Finishing and Rubbing Out

Review of Hand Finishing and Rubbing Out with Hendrik Varju.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/woodtalkonline/~3/Mq9sK_dZlTI/review_03.mp3

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American Electric Technologies Announces Solar Industry's First 1 MW 1000 Volt UL 1741-Tested Inverter System

Houston-based American Electric Technologies, Inc. (NASDAQ: AETI) the leading global provider of power delivery solutions for the traditional and renewable energy industries, today announced that the company has received notification from TUV Rheinland that its 1 MW 1000 Volt Integrated Solar Inversion Station (ISIS?) has successfully passed the solar inverter tests as outlined in UL 1741-2010. UL1741-2010 is the UL Standard for Solar Inverter equipment and other solar products for use with Distributed Energy resources.

Source: http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/partner/american-electric-technologies-inc-aeti/news/article/2011/06/american-electric-technologies-announces-solar-industrys-first-1-mw-1000-volt-ul-1741-tested-inverter-system?cmpid=rss

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148 ? Get a Grip!

MicroJig's GRR-Ripper is a solid investment in your personal workshop safety!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/Y0prIi3OUD4/TheWoodWhisperer-148600.mp4

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Ham Radio Clubs Discover Solar Power

Filed under: Solar Energy News


Source: http://www.solarpowerbuzzmedia.com/2011/06/ham-radio-clubs-discover-solar-power.html

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32- Pop Goes the Maple

In this episode, I put the finish on the pencil holder. Learn how to Pop the grain.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/jYhLOpfkgvw/TheWoodWhisperer-episode32181.mp4

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Solar Manifesto Interview

Source: http://akeenasolar.blogspot.com/2009/12/solar-manifesto-interview.html

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Dienstag, 28. Juni 2011

16- Wish You Veneer

Ever want to make your own veneer? Let me show you how!

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/TheWoodWhisperer/~3/EOSdZcbHAFY/TheWoodWhisperer-Episode16808.mp4

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Renewable Energy Grant

Source: http://djhconstructioninc.blogspot.com/2009/03/renewable-energy-grant.html

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first time drawer building

I’m looking to build drawers for my new assembly table, and seeking advice. I have never build drawers, and I do not have a table saw, router table, or dovetail jig. Aesthetics not a priority.

It’s a 4’x4’ top, set on 2”x4” framing. I want two sets of drawers, cavities for the drawer sets are each around 22”x22”x22”. Will hold measuring tools, sanding stuff, jig saw, router stuff, hand tools, nothing too heavy. Shop in an uninsulated garage.

My questions are:
What drawer heights do you find most practical?
If I make the drawer boxes out of 3/4 birch ply with glued and screwed butt joints, will that be OK? Would rabbets make them stronger?
is 3/16 hardboard OK for the bottoms? Would you support it with something underneath?
I would like full extension slides, but there are so many options and prices. Was thinking these would be right:

http://www.grizzly.com/products/3-8-x-20-Ball-Bearing-Slides/H2901

but would welcome advice. I’m assuming I can just hang the slides on the framing?

Thanks in advance!


Source: http://lumberjocks.com/topics/28051

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Cloudscape: natural solar power

Source: http://solardweller.blogspot.com/2006/04/cloudscape-natural-solar-power.html

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where to buy steel stock???

Hi every one
i am located in SE Melbourne and i am trying to find a source for my metal needs.
i tried Bohler that is very close to where i work but i feel their pricing is a bit on the high side.

where do you source your materials from? any suggestions welcome
thank you

Source: http://www.woodworkforums.com/f65/where-buy-steel-stock-137453/

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Australia: Alternative Energy Grants


Geothermal Plant

From geothermal power to better batteries, millions have been spent on alternative energy research grants in Australia, according to Rod Myer writing for The Age of Australia.

The AUD $23 million (approximately $17 million) spent by the Australian Federal Government under the first tranche of its $100 million (US $73m) pledge to aid the alternative energy sector has highlighted innovations by local companies to cure Australia's fossil fuel addiction.

Two companies awarded grants under the Renewable Energy Development Initiative (REDI) have developed a no-emissions alternative for base-load generation. Geodynamics received $5 million grant to help develop its geothermal electricity plant near Innamincka in the north of South Australia. Scope Energy, another betting its future on geothermal energy, received $3.9 million grant to aid development. Its principal, Roger Massey-Greene, says the grant will help finance a drilling program of 500-metre deep holes to prove up its resource. Scope plans to open a 50-megawatt plant, but Mr Massey-Greene says he hopes to see this expand to 1000 MW in the longer term.

Scope has a geographic advantage, he believes. Its site is near Millicent, in the south-east of South Australia, meaning it is close to transmission lines and the population centres of Melbourne and Adelaide. "We expect the cost to be very competitive with combined-cycle gas power plants," Mr Massey-Greene said.

Scope's geothermal technology will tap hot water heated deep in the earth and run it through a heat exchanger to generate electricity. Mr Massey-Greene likens this process to a "fridge operating in reverse".

Geodynamics' system will pump water through hot rocks and use the resulting steam to generate power. Scope's wells will be as deep as 4.5 kilometres. The technology that Scope is planning has been in use at a plant in Italy that has operated for 101 years, Mr Massey-Greene said.

Stage one of the plant is expected to cost $4 million per megawatt to construct, compared with about $750,000 for a combined-cycle gas plant. "But we have no fuel costs," Mr Massey-Greene said. Geothermal plants run at an output of about 98 per cent of rated capacity. Mr Massey-Green believes geothermal power has a great future. In New Zealand it provides 7 per cent of power needs and this could rise to as much as 15 per cent. Some in the market believe that Scope will float in the first half of 2006.

Melbourne-based Katrix will use its $811,000 Renewable Energy Development Initiative grant to further develop its new fluid expander that may enable solar energy to be harnessed for electricity. Founder Attilio Demichelli says the expander, which does the job of a turbine, will allow solar thermal energy to be adapted for small-scale use far more cheaply than photovoltaic systems.

Katrix is developing units in which solar energy will heat refrigeration fluid that will run through an expander linked to a generator to produce power. The expander is cheaper than a miniature turbine to build and has a number of advantages, including its ability to take gas or steam at 22 atmospheres (twenty two times atmospheric pressure) back to one atmosphere in one step.

Katrix projects that in the Californian market ? once government solar energy grants are factored in ? its system will return its cost to consumers in two to three years, compared with 15 years for photovoltaic systems. Mr Demichelli, a private investor, and inventor Yannis Tropalis have invested over $3 million in the technology in three years.

Another REDI grant, of $290,000, has gone to V-Fuel, which is developing a vanadium bromide redox battery. The funding will help develop a prototype of a battery that its promoters hope will be efficient enough to use to store power from renewable energy plants. Efficient storage would enable technologies such as wind power and solar energy to get over a bugbear ? unpredictability, because no one knows when the sun will shine or the wind will blow.

V-Fuel principal Michael Kazacos says the grant is crucial to the company, which has raised only $400,000 up to now. V-Fuel has developed a five-kilowatt battery but is aiming to produce a 50-kilowatt prototype. That, he says, will cost $1 million, and further funding is being sought from another federal grant scheme.

"There is a lot of interest in Europe," Mr Kazacos said. "We have had offers of collaboration from there." The battery was 85 per cent efficient, he said, and "we are aiming at having a $200-per-kilowatt production cost". The vanadium bromide process was developed at the University of NSW by Professor Maria Skyllas-Kazacos, who is a principal of V-Fuel.


according to Origin - Sliver Cells are "long, ultra thin, quite flexible & perfectly bifacial"

Origin Energy received a $5 million grant to aid development of its facilities for manufacturing solar energy cells using photovoltaic sliver technology. The technology aims to cut the cost of solar energy cells by reducing silicon usage by up to 90 per cent. Sliver cells are micromachined to less than 70 microns thick with solar cell efficiency running at over 19%. Silicon is the most expensive part of a solar energy cell. Origin Energy says it costs $11,000 to fit a house with a one-kilowatt unit. This would take 20 years or more to pay itself off. However, as energy prices rise and production costs fall, this payback time will be cut. Origin Energy also owns a 19% stake in Geodynamics and offers Green Earth electricity from 100% renewable sources to Australian electricity consumers. For more green energy in Australia see the government Green Power website.

Geothermal Energy: Hot Dry Rock


Article in The Age on Australian Alternative Energy Grants

Source: http://alt-e.blogspot.com/2005/12/australia-alternative-energy-grants.html

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