Live Edge TV / Entertainment Stand

nclemmons

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Joined
Jan 22, 2007
Messages
3,202
Location
Bentonville, AR
Just completed this TV / Entertainment stand for my daughter.  It's my first time working with live edge wood.
The wood was sourced locally at Owl hardwoods in suburban Chicago.  

The live edge was prepped with a wire brush in a Festool drill to remove the dirt and grit.  This was then followed by hand sanding from 150 up to 600 grit with particular focus on the edges to make sure there was no chance of splinters.  I also used a small brass wire brush to get into the areas where the drill brush would not go.

Overall dimensions:  42 w x 15 d x 18 1/2 h  This will end up supporting a 40" TV in my daughter's apartment.
Woods: Bubinga and Wenge
Construction: 36 Dominos - 50 x 8mm - 2x per connection x 8 joints per leg + 2 per bottom foot
Finish: Sanded to 600 grit finish + Watco oil x 5 coats + wax x 3 coats + Rotex buffing
Sketchup model available if interested
Festool sanders, TS55, Rotex, T-drill, Domino and various hand planes were used.

Bottom foot (below the bottom shelf) was a piece of Wenge 1 1/2 x 2" x 11" with chamfered corners.  Anchored with two Dominos that are free floating in oversize mortises and one screw countersunk in the middle of each from the bottom.  

The domino makes this kind of construction so easy.  I used two pieces of 3/4 wood to properly align the domino joiner across the top and bottom pieces having taped the top and bottom back to back to 'align' for the domino placement given I was doing two per joint across the 10" span of the legs.  I needed to make sure every tenon matched up properly.  I was able to do this with no wide mortises - everything cut to fit with lots of measurement checking.  And a little tapping with rubber mallet!

Will need to deliver and install in the coming weeks and will add an 'in place' photo then.

Feedback or questions welcome!

Neil

 
Beautiful!  Love the bubinga / wenge mix as well as the subdued finish.  I'd try to imitate that but my dogs love to chew on bark  [scared].

Peter
 
Nice job, Neil...but I'm really interested in more pics of that operating room that you use as a workshop!
 
Love the live edge on that, Neil... especially love Bubinga and its sapwood (I'm a sap for sapwood, okay that was bad...)

That does look like a nice shop in underneath the unit in the first pics.  Two Walko-3s?  And the tables haven't split yet; you must live somewhere more humid than here :)

It looks like a workout to move that around.  Just sayin' :)
 
Thanks Paul-Marcel!

I have one Walko-3 and an MFT/3 and a few other benches / tables.  I'll have to post some shop images.  I've had no issues at all with the tops on the Walko - my workshop is in my basement and it's air-conditioned and heated so very humidity controlled.

The combination of Bubinga and Wenge is HEAVY.  The top is about 1 1/4" and the uprights are 1 3/4 x 2.  I was surprised but it takes two people to move that stand around.

Neil
 
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