I did manage to pull the clamp setup off of the front cabinet face frame, but when I tried to pull the masking tape it wanted to tear rather than lift. I was going to use GPW’s heat gun trick, but decided I didn’t want to give up the heater to use the extension cord. Not a big task and I’ll get to it later (hardly worth even mentioning).
Okay, where did I leave off fitting the cabinet floor panel? Maybe I can fit that and I don’t think the stain cares much what temperature it is.
Well, the panel was already fit, so I decided to take a look and see that everything was still the way it was in the dry fit before gluing the face frame in. Dry fit the front ledger.
Despite having reduced the heads of the screws securing the side ledgers, they still were slightly wider than the panel groove, so where the side riblets land they were sticking up a bit.
Karl asked why I had not put these screws further back out from under the riblets,

And here I have used the 3/8 chisel and a little spot drilling to make a little pocket.
I’m not sure if this will change the fit any, and I’m not going to try to fill and move the screw holes in the wall, so it is what it is. There may be a little shadow line under these on final. (It is way back in the front corner of the cabinet… doh…

The key catcher shelf panel has not been sized yet and I am still trying to decide whether to install this before the front wall goes on, or to wait until I have cut in the lower front cabinet... the locker that will protrude into the back of the tongue box. Either way, it was too cold to glue the rail and side ledgers in for the shelf in order to fit the panel.
Staining the upper front cabinet floor panel will only take a minute or two, and since the shelf panel is not sized yet, it only makes sense to finish these together. So what’s next?
I did a little housekeeping and cleaned up the accumulation of stuff that had collected in the cabin; dug out the toe kick spar that will go at the bottom of the front wall and checked the fit of that; then called it a night after just an hour and a half.
So now, Saturday, (play broken record) it is still too cold to glue. Looking ahead to tasks that do not require glue or finish, I have the rough stock and detailed drawing for the lower hatch actuator mounts,
…and it is nice and warm downstairs where the milling machine is.
So that was a no brainer decision. The drawing shows a built up piece screwed together using 3/8 flat bar aluminum and pocketed cylindrical socket head screws, but Karl suggested that it would be quicker and easier to just mill them out of billet.
First a couple of rough cuts in the big Marvel saw to get the blank lengths a little closer to final, then to the mill. Here I am “qualifying” the blanks by first holding them by the “factory” faces and milling one side flat; then turning them on the parallels and milling the opposite side parallel to the first and flat; then measuring for reference and milling to the final dimension. This is the first reference cut.
Not shown, when I flipped them to get the other side, I also left them sticking out of the ends of the vice so that I could make a cleanup pass along one end, squaring that up. Then I flipped that true end down onto the parallels and end milled the blanks to final length.
On the bench I used dial calipers to layout some reference points for the bevel cuts, and scribed the lines. Then I used a parallel resting on the top of the vice to line the scribe line up parallel and clamped the block in the vice askew. Now I end milled the corner off until I got down to the scribe line. In this shot you can just see the scribe line for the long bevel about halfway between the top cut (in progress) and the vice.
Since the short bevel is 90 deg to the long bevel, all I had to do was flip the piece over with the long bevel on the parallels and the short bevel sticking out of the side of the vice so that I could cut with the side of the cutter.
Here’s one of them with the final profile shape (except for rounding the corners over on the sander).
Next up is hogging out the valleys.
After that I switched from the rough cutter and made the final dimensions on the valley.
Setting the final dimension and finish on the sides, before drilling the thru holes for the shoulder bolts that will be the pivot points for the actuators.
I’ll do the rounding on the sander at work. It has a hard back and a work rest that is square to the belt, whereas Karl’s belt sander is freehand. Also, the mounting bolt holes are to be threaded with helicoil inserts, so I will do those at work where we have the proper sized installation kit.
That’s 4 more hours in and no clue as to what I will work on next. Weather forecast is cold with chance of snow.