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#1
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Picture posted to alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking
A friend and I were discussing ways to drill cribbage board holes with reasonable accuracy, and this is what I came up with. Remembering that there was some discussion about this on the wreck, I thought I'd post it here. In case it isn't self explanatory, here are a few salient points. This will only work for holes that go all the way through, though it's not difficult to imagine building it to allow the board to be underneath the jig, The large top piece is the jig itself, and the 6 pieces below it represent the board, moved along for each hole to be drilled. The jig should be clamped to the drill press table, and should have a fence to set the position of the line of holes. The first hole is drilled wherever you want to start, and the next 4 are drilled by using a pin through hole 'b' and the previous board hole. The 6th hole is positioned by putting the pin through hole 'a' and the first hole drilled in the board. All subsequent holes in the line are positioned using hole 'a', ensuring proper spacing for both individual holes and hole groups. Any and all critiques are welcome. Larry |
#2
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It's easy enough to modify the jig for a drop-pin to align the holes
without drilling through. Bugs |
#3
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Simply buy a cheap Cribbage game in the layout that you like and use the
game board for the template. Double stick tape it on top to the piece you will be making and drill through the game board holes. Let the game board that you bought be the template guide. "Oleg Lego" wrote in message ... Picture posted to alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking A friend and I were discussing ways to drill cribbage board holes with reasonable accuracy, and this is what I came up with. Remembering that there was some discussion about this on the wreck, I thought I'd post it here. In case it isn't self explanatory, here are a few salient points. This will only work for holes that go all the way through, though it's not difficult to imagine building it to allow the board to be underneath the jig, The large top piece is the jig itself, and the 6 pieces below it represent the board, moved along for each hole to be drilled. The jig should be clamped to the drill press table, and should have a fence to set the position of the line of holes. The first hole is drilled wherever you want to start, and the next 4 are drilled by using a pin through hole 'b' and the previous board hole. The 6th hole is positioned by putting the pin through hole 'a' and the first hole drilled in the board. All subsequent holes in the line are positioned using hole 'a', ensuring proper spacing for both individual holes and hole groups. Any and all critiques are welcome. Larry |
#4
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The Leon entity posted thusly:
Simply buy a cheap Cribbage game in the layout that you like and use the game board for the template. Double stick tape it on top to the piece you will be making and drill through the game board holes. Let the game board that you bought be the template guide. I thought of that, but one of the problems I always have is positioning the piece accurately enough. Every time I move the piece to a new position, I stand the chance of having the drill bit wear the hole in the pattern. I was looking for a way to avoid having to use the pattern holes in that manner. |
#5
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![]() "Oleg Lego" wrote in message ... The Leon entity posted thusly: Simply buy a cheap Cribbage game in the layout that you like and use the game board for the template. Double stick tape it on top to the piece you will be making and drill through the game board holes. Let the game board that you bought be the template guide. I thought of that, but one of the problems I always have is positioning the piece accurately enough. Every time I move the piece to a new position, I stand the chance of having the drill bit wear the hole in the pattern. I was looking for a way to avoid having to use the pattern holes in that manner. If you are using a drill press it should not be an issue unless you plan on making 100's and in that case make several master templates. |
#6
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#8
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![]() "Oleg Lego" A friend and I were discussing ways to drill cribbage board holes with reasonable accuracy, and this is what I came up with. Remembering that there was some discussion about this on the wreck, I thought I'd post it here. snip Any and all critiques are welcome. Larry I did mine with one of these. http://stores.ebay.com/Cribbage-Craft I worked very well. Dave |
#9
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Oleg Lego wrote:
Picture posted to alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking A friend and I were discussing ways to drill cribbage board holes with reasonable accuracy, and this is what I came up with. Remembering that there was some discussion about this on the wreck, I thought I'd post it here. snip Any and all critiques are welcome. Should work, but a word of caution (based on my experience with a similar jig): Be VERY careful that the jig and workpiece stay very tight to the fence. Get a shaving between the workpiece and the fence, and you will create an error in that hole, which will start compounding when that hole is used as the reverence hole on the peg. I'd suggest filing off the side of the peg farthest from the fence so that you can always keep the workpiece tight to the fence (but don't create slop in the direction along the fence. Here's an alternative, how I would probably do it: cut a stop block and six spader blocks: 1 width spacer is the length of the workpiece, and the width of the distance between centers of the two rows of holes. 1 group spacer is the length of the distance between groups of holes 4 hole spacers are the length of the distance between holes (I'd make these by ripping, then thicknessing a piece to desired spacing, then cutting into 4 blocks. To use, set the stop block on the left, and move the fence back to register for the row of holes farthest from the fence. Align the stop block to target the hole farthest from the block. So if the stop block is on your left, you will first drill the lowest right-hand hole. Then insert the width spacer to drill the opposite hole, insert one of hole spacers between the workpiece and the stop block, drill, remove the width spacer, drill, ... ending up with the group spacer to drill the first pair of holes in the next group. Then with the workpiece held steady, remove the spacers and register the stop block to the workpiece, clamp it, and with the drill off confirm that the bit is still registered to the last hole you drilled. Then repeat. -- Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently. |
#10
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alexy wrote:
compounding when that hole is used as the reverence hole on the peg. "reference hole", obviously! Gotta fine won of those spell checkers that can reed my mine. -- Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently. |
#11
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The alexy entity posted thusly:
Oleg Lego wrote: Picture posted to alt.binaries.pictures.woodworking A friend and I were discussing ways to drill cribbage board holes with reasonable accuracy, and this is what I came up with. Remembering that there was some discussion about this on the wreck, I thought I'd post it here. snip Any and all critiques are welcome. Should work, but a word of caution (based on my experience with a similar jig): Be VERY careful that the jig and workpiece stay very tight to the fence. Get a shaving between the workpiece and the fence, and you will create an error in that hole, which will start compounding when that hole is used as the reverence hole on the peg. I'd suggest filing off the side of the peg farthest from the fence so that you can always keep the workpiece tight to the fence (but don't create slop in the direction along the fence. Here's an alternative, how I would probably do it: .... instructions snipped ... Sounds like a good method. Thanks! Larry |
#12
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The comment about wood chips under the jig is very good. I have learned
to cut some chip clearance on the jig corners and keep shop air handy for keeping the jig clear. Bugs |
#13
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Larry, I designed such a setup using computer CAD program. It puts a +
sign at center of each hole. I print that, spray stick to board and drill into each +. Thats the easy part, my challenge is how do you color each players path differently ? I want peg setup for 3 players, each having different colored wood for their path. I have not figured out how to cut these on scrollsaw? or other? to get a seamless path. No kidding, send over the board dims and I would be happy to layout the pattern for you and email back a jpeg. Thoughts ? Tom |
#14
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Can you explaian how you did this, or give some more info. I'd like to
do the same thing. On 28 Jan 2006 07:36:32 -0800, "Tom" wrote: Larry, I designed such a setup using computer CAD program. It puts a + sign at center of each hole. I print that, spray stick to board and drill into each +. Thats the easy part, my challenge is how do you color each players path differently ? I want peg setup for 3 players, each having different colored wood for their path. I have not figured out how to cut these on scrollsaw? or other? to get a seamless path. No kidding, send over the board dims and I would be happy to layout the pattern for you and email back a jpeg. Thoughts ? Tom John Hewitt, Malaga, Spain |
#16
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Larry, you solicited "all ideas"; sorry for upsetting you. I have the
CAD skills (for work), but no CNC. |
#17
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The Tom entity posted thusly:
Larry, you solicited "all ideas"; sorry for upsetting you. I have the CAD skills (for work), but no CNC. Oh! Sorry! For some reason I had you confused with Morris Dovey, who does have a CNC machine. No idea why I confused the two of you, but I did. At any rate, you did not upset me, and I apologize for coming across that way. I did indeed solicit all ideas, and that isn't a bad one at all. Larry |
#18
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