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Building Planter Boxes

Bob Ryley is in the garage workshop in this episode helping Bob build a planter box for the sunroom. Using a compass to draw intersecting circles, Ryley creates a simple pattern for the legs of the box. Next, he scores the line with a knife before cutting with a saber saw. The legs are joined to the main boards with biscuits and some wood glue. To make the end pieces, Ryley again uses a compass to create the outline, and then cuts the pattern with a saber saw. The end pieces are attached with glue and some nails. Finally, the bottom board is laid inside the box and nailed in place. When it's complete, Bob and Ryley move it to its new home under the picture window and add some potted plants.
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Building Planter Boxes

  computer-generated transcript - may not be 100% accurate

" The project we're starting in here is for our sunroom inside the house where we have a huge picture window that's a perfect place forced to have a big planter box exactly. And so I kind of sketched something out a couple of weeks ago. And suggested that Bob figure out how to build it. It's essentially just a big planter box about what eight or nine feet wide just yeah around a little under eight foot six and the ends of it will be worth a cool one by twelve in the side is one by twelve and then what we wanted to do was put in a curve for a little ogee foot -- and have you figured out how to do that. Yes I have."

" Basically what you gonna do here. -- to come this way here. Strike and I in this direction and it money come back into it did get some more points for the other park. In this room."

" And that's your new center point. And basically that's right yes basically the curve that we want for the leg and in fact here's what it's already been cut out. So this is real simple stuff but when it's all finished and I together could be an elegant looking at a little affair -- find terrorists and stuff now -- Yes and now we're going to rip down all the material run stand off with those legs at ten and a half inches. Before we start cutting our shape out with the -- are you want to score it right that's right because what we using here is cedar is really soft. And then this could tear out. But cedar is also very very long lasting wood in situations where there's. Moisture or where it's outside in the weather so that's why we chose it. And that will keep it from tearing up along the edge of the grain that is. All right I'll start sanding this when a little bit while you cut the others. And so we want to join these now. With the biscuit. Right so he's going to make a couple of my -- we'll learn a little biscuits that. We'll go into place little."

" You know that's."

" Room we're going to turn these. I thought I had absolutely no right to -- temporary quickly that's going to hold them together --"

" Definitely don't."

" And now we're gonna look at how. How would put together the end pieces. -- we're still looking at sixteen inches. The -- actual length."

" Now we're just gonna look for the high side. That's a little."

" And that's the cut. This. All right so glue and some nails we're doing. All right so then one continues forward along the bottom."

" That's really gonna stiffen up."

" And then we'll just nail it we. Okay. It fits the ticket right right now some six inch -- plots would month. And apparently -- nice effect."

" right."

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