Reiska said:JMB: We have similar fobias towards many different races like gypsies, russians and somalis especially, but the unfortunate fact is that a few bad apples ruin the reputation of the whole race by being visible and different.
Yes, I had my cars aluminum wheels & several boxes of fine German white wine stolen from my cellar by gypsies years back, but I still don't label every gypsy as a thief.
Heck, my uncle used to call his steel tipped landing shoes Packie Punchers in the 80's in the UK when the Pakistanis were seen making a splash into the Brittish society with their different cultural ways of going about their lives.
I guess its unavoidable to have such cultural collisions before everyone wizens up and tones down their peculiarities and an acceptable fusion emerges.
Reiska said:JMB: We have similar fobias towards many different races like gypsies, russians and somalis especially, but the unfortunate fact is that a few bad apples ruin the reputation of the whole race by being visible and different.
Yes, I had my cars aluminum wheels & several boxes of fine German white wine stolen from my cellar by gypsies years back, but I still don't label every gypsy as a thief.
Heck, my uncle used to call his steel tipped landing shoes Packie Punchers in the 80's in the UK when the Pakistanis were seen making a splash into the Brittish society with their different cultural ways of going about their lives.
I guess its unavoidable to have such cultural collisions before everyone wizens up and tones down their peculiarities and an acceptable fusion emerges.Yes the funfairs exactly like that, well my chalet is pretty permanent unless I decided too move, but most showman travel with caravans and lorrys and come home too their chalet
Haha that made me laugh,I just used the ordinary green coated screws, yeah I really liked the system.Deansocial said:Very nice deck, 1 thing that bugs me is that missing knot on the rh of the first steps. Its just because its right at the front of the deck. I see you have used camo screws too, how did you find them? Jmb used them recently on a job but being jmb he used triple coated nuke proof stainless steel screws at a cost of £12 a screw
Yes I HATE end grain, was originally going too do 2 curved steps but I didn't feel confident enough skill wise too tackle themjmbfestool said:Done a really nice job on the decking! YES no end grain showing good! my pet hate that is!
gypsys or pikies dangerous topic to discuss in England lol I have had them steel stuff from my property they love metal!
JMB
sean_hogan said:Yes I HATE end grain, was originally going too do 2 curved steps but I didn't feel confident enough skill wise too tackle themjmbfestool said:Done a really nice job on the decking! YES no end grain showing good! my pet hate that is!
gypsys or pikies dangerous topic to discuss in England lol I have had them steel stuff from my property they love metal!
JMB
jmbfestool said:Yes definetly I was probably about 12 hours or more on each stepp section, all the mitres had too be clamped and were glued using title bond 3, curved would of just took so long and I don't have a shed or workshop so it's hard enough too dosean_hogan said:Yes I HATE end grain, was originally going too do 2 curved steps but I didn't feel confident enough skill wise too tackle themjmbfestool said:Done a really nice job on the decking! YES no end grain showing good! my pet hate that is!
gypsys or pikies dangerous topic to discuss in England lol I have had them steel stuff from my property they love metal!
JMB
It looks good though as it is. Curved would of been nice but mainly just different. Curved would of added ALOT more time to the job though.
JMB
sean_hogan said:jmbfestool said:Yes definetly I was probably about 12 hours or more on each stepp section, all the mitres had too be clamped and were glued using title bond 3, curved would of just took so long and I don't have a shed or workshop so it's hard enough too dosean_hogan said:Yes I HATE end grain, was originally going too do 2 curved steps but I didn't feel confident enough skill wise too tackle themjmbfestool said:Done a really nice job on the decking! YES no end grain showing good! my pet hate that is!
gypsys or pikies dangerous topic to discuss in England lol I have had them steel stuff from my property they love metal!
JMB
It looks good though as it is. Curved would of been nice but mainly just different. Curved would of added ALOT more time to the job though.
JMB
Well 3 of the joints that I did when it was raining and the joints got wet at the end grain and failed a few weeks ago when we got the roasting hot sun for a week but all the rest are solid as a rock, I then read somewhere that titebond3 doesn't cure properly if there is a lot of moisture present as it sucks the moisture out and causes it too fail. So I let it fully dry out that week taped up the bottom and front of the joints and filled them with glue again and they are solid now, dries in a dark brown same colour as my stain so happy days so farjmbfestool said:sean_hogan said:jmbfestool said:Yes definetly I was probably about 12 hours or more on each stepp section, all the mitres had too be clamped and were glued using title bond 3, curved would of just took so long and I don't have a shed or workshop so it's hard enough too dosean_hogan said:Yes I HATE end grain, was originally going too do 2 curved steps but I didn't feel confident enough skill wise too tackle themjmbfestool said:Done a really nice job on the decking! YES no end grain showing good! my pet hate that is!
gypsys or pikies dangerous topic to discuss in England lol I have had them steel stuff from my property they love metal!
JMB
It looks good though as it is. Curved would of been nice but mainly just different. Curved would of added ALOT more time to the job though.
JMB
Its nice to hear you made an effort on the joints but I dont think Tite bond 3 is going to hold your joints. I used PU construct (which I believe is a better glue for this kind of application) on tanalised timber but that failed after the sun did its business.
If it does hold out let me know ill try it my self!
JMB
Not really sure woodguy I thought it was powder coat but it's really thin and smooth coating.woodguy7 said:Looks real nice Sean. What is the metal spindles, are they galvanised ?
sean_hogan said:Not really sure woodguy I thought it was powder coat but it's really thin and smooth coating.woodguy7 said:Looks real nice Sean. What is the metal spindles, are they galvanised ?
The handrail comes as a kit bottom,top rails and spindles ,posts and post caps I made.
Believe it or not the handrail kit is from wickes and it looks the part. Only thing I didn't like was it was holes about 20mm deep for each spindle so I filled each hole with titebond3 then inserted the spindle and wiped off excess glue that squeezed out. So my theory is it should stop them rotting as the water can't sit in that cavity now