october 2017 7 - m · pdf fileoctober 2017 7 monday outdoor walkers 6:30, st lucia talking...

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7 October 2017 Monday Outdoor Walkers 6:30, St Lucia Talking Books 9am to noon 2 nd & 4 th Mondays Talking Tech Computers 9 to noon 1st & 3 rd Mondays Bicycle Maintenance 1pm to 4pm Book Club 1:30 to 3:30 at the 100 acre Bar 4 th Monday Garage Band music in the afternoon Tuesday Indooroopilly S/Centre Walkers 8am IT & computers 9am till noon Coffee and Chat 9am till noon Woodworking 1pm till 5pm Making things with wood: with a saw, hammer or a lathe Building native bee box hives, and bee hotels. Come and join in this money making activity for the Shed Wednesday Outdoor Walkers 6:30, Chelmer and Graceville Committee Meeting 2 nd Wednesday, 9am Member’s Meeting 3 rd Wednesday, 9am Followed by a guest speaker at 10am Investment & Superannuation 4:30 to 5:30pm This month, 2 nd Wednesday Cinema At The Shed CATS Last Wednesday of the month, at 7:15pm Thursday Indooroopilly S/Centre Walkers 8am Social Chat Group 9am till noon Wood Turning 1pm till 5pm. And bee hive building Friday Outdoor Walkers 6:30, Taringa Drawing with Des 9am till 10am Bicycle Maintenance 9am to noon. Ukulele Fortnightly, 10am at the Scout Hall Kenmore Open Mic 4pm to 7pm Activity Co-ordinators Bicycle Maintenance: Alan Baker, [email protected] Book Club: Garth Forster, [email protected] Computers: Harry Howchin, [email protected] Drawing: Des Derrington, [email protected] Guest Speakers: Pieter Scheelings, [email protected] Investment & Super: John Gardner, [email protected] Garage Band Music: Ross Knox. [email protected] Open Mic: Ross Knox, [email protected] Talking Books: Frank Denham, [email protected] Talking Tech: Frank Denham, [email protected] Ukulele: Bob Barker, [email protected] Outdoor Walking: Les deKretser, [email protected] Woodwork: Garth Forster, [email protected] CATS: Frank Denham, [email protected] Workshop Training: Paul Dunstan, [email protected] Sausage Sizzles: Seton Porter, seton.[email protected] “What’s Up” a weekly news to keep up to date and a reminder of events in the coming week. [email protected] www.mensshedindooroopilly.com Ph 3878 2185 60 Stamford Road, P.O Box 74, Indooroopilly, Q 4068 Proudly Sponsored by the National Australia Bank

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7 October 2017

Monday

Outdoor Walkers

6:30, St Lucia

Talking Books

9am to noon

2nd & 4th Mondays

Talking Tech

Computers

9 to noon

1st & 3rd Mondays

Bicycle Maintenance

1pm to 4pm

Book Club

1:30 to 3:30 at the

100 acre Bar

4th Monday

Garage Band music in

the afternoon

Tuesday

Indooroopilly S/Centre

Walkers

8am

IT & computers

9am till noon

Coffee and Chat

9am till noon

Woodworking

1pm till 5pm

Making things with

wood: with a saw,

hammer or a lathe

Building native bee

box hives, and bee

hotels. Come and join

in this money making

activity for the Shed

Wednesday

Outdoor Walkers

6:30, Chelmer and

Graceville

Committee Meeting

2nd Wednesday, 9am

Member’s Meeting

3rd Wednesday, 9am

Followed by a guest

speaker at 10am

Investment &

Superannuation

4:30 to 5:30pm

This month, 2nd

Wednesday

Cinema At The Shed

CATS

Last Wednesday of the

month, at 7:15pm

Thursday

Indooroopilly S/Centre

Walkers

8am

Social Chat Group

9am till noon

Wood Turning

1pm till 5pm.

And bee hive building

Friday

Outdoor Walkers

6:30, Taringa

Drawing with Des

9am till 10am

Bicycle Maintenance

9am to noon.

Ukulele

Fortnightly, 10am at

the Scout Hall

Kenmore

Open Mic

4pm to 7pm

Activity Co-ordinators

Bicycle Maintenance: Alan Baker, [email protected]

Book Club: Garth Forster, [email protected]

Computers: Harry Howchin, [email protected]

Drawing: Des Derrington, [email protected]

Guest Speakers: Pieter Scheelings, [email protected]

Investment & Super: John Gardner,

[email protected]

Garage Band Music: Ross Knox. [email protected]

Open Mic: Ross Knox, [email protected]

Talking Books: Frank Denham, [email protected]

Talking Tech: Frank Denham, [email protected]

Ukulele: Bob Barker, [email protected]

Outdoor Walking: Les deKretser, [email protected]

Woodwork: Garth Forster, [email protected]

CATS: Frank Denham, [email protected]

Workshop Training: Paul Dunstan, [email protected]

Sausage Sizzles: Seton Porter, [email protected]

“What’s Up” a weekly news to keep up to date and a reminder of events in the coming week.

[email protected] www.mensshedindooroopilly.com

Ph 3878 2185 60 Stamford Road, P.O Box 74, Indooroopilly, Q 4068

Proudly Sponsored by the National Australia Bank

Guest Speakers Program,

presented by Pieter Scheelings.

[email protected]

Guest Speakers are invited to the

Shed to speak after each

Member’s meeting on the 3rd

Wednesday of the month.

18 October, Hearing health in the community.

Anastasia Roberts from Australian Hearing

15 November, Queensland Rail. More information to come.

TBA: Rae Plush from Continence Foundation. Risk problems with

bladder and bowel

TBA: Kara Gerritson from the Heart Foundation. Topics related to

heart disease.

Latest goings on at the Shed

The first outing for the Food and Wine appreciation

group went off very well. We dined at My Thai in

Auchenflower, a very nice venue with good service

and an interesting spread of Thai dishes served as a set

menu.

Paul is on the look-out for the next outing.

Bunnings Sausage Sizzles

We have done very well with our sausage sizzles at Bunnings, raising a lot of money for the Shed. 27

September was our best mid-week sizzle so far, school holidays would have helped there, but the next week,

4 October was rather slow. Back at school I guess.

We settle down to a regular 1st and 4th Wednesday of the month now till Christmas. Not a big impost on the

members, but an excellent cash flow for the Shed.

Please put your name up to help on these Sizzles. It is only a 3 or 4 hour commitment to help the Shed get

better and safer equipment to work with.

As you may have noticed on the first page, we now have sponsorship of the Newsletter from the NAB bank.

They have signed up for a year. We have a crew working away at chasing up sponsorship for the Shed, if

you have any suggestions please let Les know.

I must apologise for the lateness of this newsletter, and the absence of the weekly What’s Up last week. I

am having a few medical hassles at the moment that haven’t helped. On the mend now it seems.

The Indoor Walking group leave the shed at 8am

on Tuesdays and Thursdays. They wander around

the shopping centre then finish up with a cup of

coffee. Approximately 3.5km.

Talking Tech meet on alternate Monday mornings

and chat about anything technical, digital or

otherwise. Bring along your problem and they can

probably fix it for you.

The Bicycle Maintenance group meets Monday

afternoons, and on a Friday morning as well, to try

and move the build-up of bikes in the Shed.

The Investment & Superannuation group meets

at 4:30pm on the first Wednesday of the month.

John brings along interesting articles to share, as

you can too.

Talking Books meet alternate Monday mornings to

review books they have read.

Tuesday Chat, every Tuesday morning is a busy

time at the Shed. Come along and have your say.

Thursday Chat as well.

Cinema At The Shed, CATS, runs a classic movie

on the last Wednesday of the month at 7:15pm.

Look out for the notice in the What’s Coming Up.

Hopefully this will be running again now that Frank

is back on board.

Wood work has been covered elsewhere. There

are a few small personal projects on the go, Chris

completed another Campaign Chair, Paul a table

top for his Wok burner, Bob a top for something

musical.

Tradesmen

Do you have a good tradesman that you can recommend? Recently we were looking for plumbers and

electrician.

I am looking for someone to do some tidying up in my garden, as well as take a few small branches down

before a storm does.

Email in your trusty tradesmen and we will list these guys so others can be helped out.

Membership is now up to around 148. A lot of these new members are a result of our recent Open Day.

There is plenty to do at the Shed, in the workshop, or in the meeting rooms.

Workshop jobs at present are Native Bee Hives, Insect/Bee Hotels, Strangler Fig boxes for the BCC, and yet

to start, boxes/nests for Microbats and the like.

Additionally, last year we made up 20 “Zonta Ladies” for the Zonta Club to use in their campaign against

domestic violence. Some of the paint work on those need touching up and I (Seton)will be starting on that

soon. They would like us to make another 20 of these too, the ones last year were a great success. To make

these plywood profiles, we use the Over-Head Router. This is an interesting bit of kit and the imagination

can run wild thinking about what we can make with that tool. Stick around!

Some of the work going on in the work shop.

Ode to a ladder.

In the beginning there was a patio door surrounded by a narrow

strip of wall in my study. Having too many books in the house

that my wife and I could not bear to part with, I decided to build a

bookcase around the doorway, extending up to the ceiling. This

worked very well until age caught up with my wife and I –

standing on a small stepladder to reach the upper shelves was

becoming rather scary.

So, after much procrastination, I recently decided to design and

make a library ladder to give safer access to the upper levels of

the bookcase. A search of the Internet showed many examples of

library ladders, frequently using very similar reproduction

Victorian-era hardware which did not suit my house, which is in

the ‘Modern’ style. Instead I chose a fairly heavy-duty (100 Kg)

aluminium sliding door track set suitable for my 2.8 metre wide

bookshelf.

Before laying a hand on my tools I gave quite a bit of thought to the potential design and construction

problems that might arise, and there were a few. For example, to achieve its purpose the ladder must be

designed to be safe for a pair of 70 year-olds to use (but only one at a time of course!), be light enough to

roll across the 3 metre width of the shelves, be easy to climb, and look attractive. Also, the ladder would sit

at an acute angle to the wall, requiring careful measurements because in this situation the effect of small

errors is magnified.

Of course, the near-vertical angle of the ladder meant that most of the combined weight of the ladder and its

passenger would be borne by the bottom wheels, and only a little by the overhead track and rollers, but

better to be safe than sorry. I cut the track to length and made up some flat metal brackets to join the track to

the edge of the bookshelf at about 2.1 metres above the floor.

I happened to have a nice 2.5 metre plank of 40 mm thick European Beech that had been planed flat on both

faces, so I decided to use it for the project. I then thought about the treads. As the room is only 2.4 metres

high, climbing the ladder to much above about waist height was unnecessary, so I decided to have only 4

treads, and to install three 25 mm diameter rungs above the treads to act as hand holds (and to discourage

mountain climbers). To make the climb a little easier for our old legs I reduced the spacing between the

treads and rungs to 250 mm. I then chose a pair of 75 mm diameter rubber-rimmed castors for the sideways-

facing wheels at the bottom of the ladder. Finally, at the top of the ladder I needed a substantial cross-piece

to hold the brackets on which the ladder would hang from the track.

I figured that the side rails needed to be about 80 mm wide, so I biscuit-jointed two 30 mm strips of the 40

mm plank together to make each rail. I then had to decide how far the ladder should protrude from the

shelves, which was an easy decision because the shelves were set in a 600 mm deep wall recess. Allowing

for the 200 mm depth of the bookshelf where the track was to be installed, the ladder would slope at about

15 degrees if the base of the ladder would sit tidily just inside its alcove.

Once I knew the angle and length of the ladder, I could mark out and cut the dado slots (as they are called)

for the treads, the blind holes for the rungs, and the U-shaped cutouts at the floor ends of the rails for the

wheels, the axles of which had to be tilted so that the wheels sat vertical when the ladder was in place.

Then I made the treads, which I thought needed some grooves for a safe grip, which I made with three

passes over a moulding cutter head fitted to my table saw. I then tilted the blade of the table saw, and with

each tread held in a tapered jig, made a compound cut at each of the front corners so that they tapered neatly

to meet the rail.

After temporarily fitting a wheel to a side rail, I could measure exactly (well, almost) where the upper cross

piece needed to be, so that the ladder sat at the correct angle when the track brackets when mounted on the

cross-piece met the track rollers. Then I crossed my fingers and cut the dado slots for the cross-piece,

because a serious error here would be difficult to fix.

To assemble the ladder I decided to use wood screws recessed into 10 mm holes along the rails to fix the

treads and cross-piece, and just 22 mm diameter blind holes about 15 mm deep for the rungs, which had a

shoulder turned at each end to hide the join. I thought that the ladder would look interesting if the nice

Beech grain on the treads and rungs was visible, so I gave them several coats of clear finish, whilst the rails

were painted an off-white that matched the study walls. I then filled the screw holes with plugs cut from the

beech timber, but left them unpainted as a contrast to the white rails.

Assembling the ladder on the track was straightforward because the brackets were designed to slip onto the

roller bolts before locking the in place with a plastic retainer. But as luck would have it, I found that I had

slightly mis-calculated the height and position of the brackets on the cross-piece, because the back of the

cross-piece was catching on the shelf uprights. After a bit of thought, I fitted a packing piece under the

bracket to ensure that the cross-piece cleared the shelf uprights. Lastly I found that the floor was rather

uneven, and I needed to compensate for this by packing some of the track mounting brackets. Aah, now I

can finally enjoy using our new library ladder to access those books on the top two shelves!

An interesting article by John Gardner, one of our founding members.