17 May 2006, 03:56
Outdoor WriterOW's New Room Part III As Of May 15
Still haven't hung any heads, but I've been busy and going broke as well. My wife took me out to "look" at furniture last Friday. The looking made me $3,000 poorer.

Couch, loveseat, two end tables and coffee table were delivered on Sat. Sofa table to match is on backorder. Location is only temporary until I finish my work in the old family room part.
Below the furniture pix are a couple of one of my "take time from the boring work and do something creative" projects. I threw it together over the last two weeks, using pine planks recycyled from two of our old waterbeds. Dimensions are 38"W x 75"L x 30"H. Once I get one more coat of White Diamond bowling alley wax on the table, it will get moved to under the hanging chandelier behind the loveseat.
The heads WILL be going up this weekend, though! In fact, I just got the impala and blesbok back. Only the bushbuck and springbok left of the 12 from Africa. Then it's on to the NZ stuff -- red stag, tahr, chamois and lifesize wallaby.
17 May 2006, 04:40
308sniperWOW cant wait to see the mounts.
17 May 2006, 05:22
billrquimbyTony:
Beautiful table, but tThere are a lot of bolts under it. Are that many structurally necessary?
17 May 2006, 10:48
drummondlindseyTony,
Your room is looking fantastic! The table you built is amazing as well. Congrats on having it all come together.
drum
18 May 2006, 00:11
Outdoor WriterBill,
I probably could have gotten by with four hanger bolts for each leg, but no one has ever accused me of doing something half-assed. If four would have been sufficient, eight is even better.

Actually, those are 2 1/2" hanger bolts. They are screwed directly into the 1 1/4" thick table top one inch. Then the bolt-threaded ends protrude 3/4" thru the 3/4" X 6" x 24" solid maple leg supports. These have 6 screws thru them into the tops of the 12" wide legs, a side support with four more screws running parallel to the top and then a spreader between the tops of the two legs. Washers and nylon locking nuts complete the assembly, which is geared toward quickly separating the legs from the top to get it thru narrow doors if necessary.
Obviously, I wanted it to be stable because the top is quite heavy. I can literally put the heels of my hands on the edge of the center of a side and put all of my weight on the top without it coming a fraction of an inch off the floor on the opposite side. Likewise for the length with my weight on an end. -TONY