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Showing posts with label handmade pool tables. Show all posts
Showing posts with label handmade pool tables. Show all posts

Sunday, August 12, 2012

a custom pool table

a custom pool table

ok .. we're getting close now ... as i wrote back on july 28th, there's a lot going on in the shop. for the last week or so though, trevor and will and i have been pulling the final pieces of the pool table together. pool tables are always a challenge because, typically, we haven't built one for a while. our last one was in 2008 ... holy cow, no wonder we couldn't remember what we were doing exactly, and they are all different ... we're wrapping this one up, and, wonder of wonders, we'll be starting another one in a couple of weeks. hopefully that one will be a breeze. .. click the photos to enlarge them ...
like most things here, 'we took something' and 'did something to it'.
natural irion walnut and quilted big leaf maple
what we 'took' was the pool table below, dropped the tapered legs, changed the inlays from 'baseball inspired' to geometric and had at it. the proportions, moldings and palette are pretty much the same, but the result will be different ...
the one above we built in 2003, so no one working with me now was working with me then. but fortunately, that table is local and, coincidentally, the client requested that we 'level it up' as it was exhibiting a slight roll to one corner. after studying the roll, (it took 3 or 4 racks), we determined that the one corner was in the dead center of a +/- 30 clear span and either the thick carpet there had crushed or the joist had sagged ever so slightly. a piece of 1/16th inch veneer and two playing cards under one leg and we were back to level. it was a bonus, as we got to check it all out and 'remember' how to build it.
like anything, you start with a bunch of parts. i never counted them, but trust me, there were a bunch ... our trusty companion is still, after 23 years of pool table making, (15 tables total) an article by paul bowman that first appeared in fine woodworking in 1989 ... i give you the link here. paul's table was different than most of ours, but the information applies (still) and if you study it, i think it's all in there somewhere.
we typically start with a leg mockup ...
and in this case, we made the mortises for the inlays and the inlays for the 16 leg pieces, but held off on gluing the inlays in until we were ready to do the finishing ...
our assembly system is a hybrid system of bolts and steel plates and captured nuts, (like for bed bolts), and i really need to document that for the future .. trevor's got it dialed in now so as long as he's around, i'm good to go.
i have documented the 'rail process' a series of steps below that define the playing area (44 x 88 in this case), and make the balls behave and the pockets the right size.
the rails are constructed in two pieces ... i've got a very detailed cad drawing with dimensions and angles and i'll post it here at some point ... the steel plates you see in the poplar above are for the rail bolts that come up through the holes you see in the slate below and lock the cushions firmly in place so the balls bank properly.
after we add the profiled rails to the polar subrails, we cut them to length using standard dimensions for each size playing area.
first we install the inlays, spaced in all cases at 1/8th (long rails) or 1/4 (end rails), of the playing area. in this case 11" starting out from the center of the side pocket and the middle of the end rails.
then we add the rubber using yellow glue and masking tape with the goal of having the point of the cushion one and 13/32nds (1.40something) of an inch above the surface of the felt so that they are not too high ... (ball does not rebound with life and kind of thuds) .. or too low ... (ball rockets off the table when struck too hard). .. a vitally important detail ...
then you have to figure out how to drill the holes for the pockets .. we do em like this, except on a full size table where we have to raise the drill press up on a platform.
then you have to drill for the bolts that hold the pockets in place ...
then you get to put it all together and bolt it all to the slate and mark out the pocket angles ...
above, i give you the keys to the kingdom ... the order in which to do all this stuff. this is my 3rd and hopefully final iteration of this list.
after marking the angles using the standard measurements and angles from paul's article and a couple of jigs we have made, we cut them on our chopsaw, all on compound, fussy angles. the ends of the rubber than get different rubber cushion 'facings' and then the felt is applied ... we'll cover that when we get to it ... soon

update 8/22
i still haven't posted the felting of the rail details, but i hope to get to that tomorrow or maybe over the weeked. the table is finished now and it will be leaving for virginia next week on tuesday
we set it up for a final check yesterday, using a piece of blue felt left over from another project. i only wanted to stretch the real camel piece once, when the table is set up for real ... plays great and i'm happy with the new design.

Monday, December 15, 2008

Build your own Pool Table Update

Build your own Pool Table Update

OTHER POOL TABLE POSTS HERE ...

12/15/08 The base is together and the slate is on for now ... Next up, cut the corners of the slate frame, cut the rails to length, drill for the pockets, attach the plates that allow you to bolt the rails to the table and move it all along ... More pics soon ...

Slate screwed on, ready to cut the rails as soon as all the cushion rubbers are glued on

Base with slate

Posts and beams with slate frame

This is an update to the post 'Build Your Own Pool Table' that I started back on November 21st. We brought the beams into the shop then so they could acclimate, rough resawed the wood for the rails, blinds and slate frame and now we're under way ... We have cut and cleaned the long beams, reinforced the resawn rails with ply and now we're about to join the base with short dowels and steel angle irons. We're also designing a light fixture (pending client approval) for over the table. I found some GREAT green glass shades at a decent price at my local lighting store and Sam and I are working out the design and pricing details ... We should have the base together by the end of the day .... Click the photos and drawings to enlarge them ....

CAD drawing for the slate and the slate support frame

CAD showing the rail lengths, pockets and cushions

Elevation with light ....

The three pieces of slate as they come to us from Imperial USA


The joinery of the slate support frame. The cross pieces are centered under the joints in the slate.

The potential glass shade for the light fixture ... It's really nice for a new one ... Usually the old ones look way better, but these are just as good .... After a few small design modifications, the client has given us the go on the light fixture ....

Friday, November 21, 2008

Build Your Own Pool Table

Build Your Own Pool Table

OK .. coming soon ... We'll be starting a pool table similar to one we made a few years ago. I think it will be our 14th or 15th since 1988 when I restored my first older table, intending that it would go in my basement. Sold that one and the next one too before I bought kind of a homely one for myself and I managed to hold on to that one. That was in 1990 when Sam was 8 and Will was 6. Needs new felt now... for the second time. Time flies .... Anyway, the one we're going to build is our first 7 footer, for a client on the Vineyard .... It will have a 'post and beam' base made from recycled barn beams ....... The beams just made it into the finish room last weekend and they are acclimating to the heat so there won't be much more to see for a week or so, but the process is interesting, and I know I'll enjoy writing about it as we go along. Not a table goes by that we don't consult the ultimate do-it-yourself article on building a pool table by Paul Bowman ... from Fine Woodworking Issue #75 ... check it out for yourself ... then click the pictures below to enlarge them ...


We made this 9 footer in 2005 and the 7 footer we will be starting soon will be similar in style...

Two hand hewn beams from a South Granville, NY barn frame circa 1850. The frame was reerected in a slightly different configuration and these beams became 'extras'. They will be used for the posts/legs and we will resaw some parts of them for the horizontal rails/beams of the base....

These rafters from the same frame will be used for the slate subframe and resawn to make the smooth wood rails and vertical 'blinds' which cover the edges of the slate and felt ... Beautiful, straightgrain, tight growth, most likely virgin timber ....

A couple of other tables we have built ... to see more .... go to the 'pool, poker, and game table' section of my website ...


This one won a Custom Woodworking Business magazine first place design award in (I think) 2005

Cherry and black paint, from 1989 ... still one of my 'classic' styles