Boat Plans For A Chesapeake Deadrise
Drawers are a lot of work. On more than one occasions Ive heard others say that a way to gauge the quality of work being done on a project is to look at doors, drawers and stairs. Making drawers, doors and stairs look good requires some patience.

All the drawers in the salon are built using half blind dovetails. I used a Porter Cable dovetail jig, and cant really complain about what a nice job these jigs do. The drawer box was built with half blind dovetails on the front, and a dado on the back.The bottom of the drawer is also let in to the sides with a dado. The actual drawer front, the part one sees when the drawer is closed, is screwed to the drawer box after the drawer is fit in to the opening. Another way to do this would be to use a rabbeted half blind dovetail drawer, which dovetails the drawer finished front the the drawer sides. The rabbeted half blind joint is more precise, and a joint I really did not feel like messing with. I like the flexibility of being able to adjust the drawer front by using the half blind joint.


The Porter Cable dovetail jig is a nice tool. The drawers work best if you keep the height of the drawers in one inch increments the add a 1/4". So drawers with heights of 3 1/4", 4 1/4", 5 1/4" and so on work the best. Its not a deal killing act if one doesnt build to these dimensions, its just that the half pins look best and centered by sticking to the whole plus 1/4". Success of building a drawer is good layout, and making sure all your cuts are perfectly square and all stock is jointed straight and planed flat. I have a half way decent miter saw, but I still prefer to make all my critical cuts on the table saw using stops to make sure all my stock is exactly the same length. Theres no mistaking that the table saw is the work horse of the shop.



Now that the drawers, and cabinets are completely finished, the next item on the to do list is the dinette itself. The dinette table is going to collapse down to make a bed, and will be large enough for two to sleep in.
Another builder I follow is working on his building the sail rig of his 75 schooner named Phoenix. He has a lot of nice colloquialisms, and one that fits what Im doing is " this is not a how to do this, rather how I did it".
This for sure describes what I have happening on my boat building adventure, and I think Ill be quoting James again in he future if its OK with James.
Cheers
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