What a day. Not a BAD day. A pretty GOOD day. But it could have been even better.
So if anyone is using the Cubby plans who is NOT a master builder (like myself), listen and learn. Photos will be in my gallery tomorrow. (Right now, I'm typing THIS instead, while the ribs cook.)
1) My side walls/profiles came out great, because the plywood God who I worshship, Mabutoo, lent a helping hand. (Jesus was busy with other things.)
2) I've read the Cubby plans a gazillion tiimes, and I kid you not when I say that not until this morning, while sitting on the TOILET reading a Bob & Ray book, that I had a vision and FINALLY understood the damn dowel concept to trace the profile. (Mabutoo doesn't care if I say damn, so please don't be offended.) I thought that somehow, you used a flexible dowel like you would a COMPASS, nail on one end, pencil tip on the other, to draw your radiuses from point to point.
Gee, what a dummy I must have been prior to this to NOT be able to read Kevin's (Kuffel's) mind), and to ultimately realize that instead, I should tap nails/brads onto the X/Y coordinates, bend the dowel AROUND these nails, and make my outline.
I guess it would have cost Kuffel an extra penny and 5 minutes to actually INCLUDE an illustration of this in the plans! But for 65 bucks and 3 seconds of download time off their server, what can I expect? (Boo, Kuffel.)
3) Their plans say use a 48" dowel for this, to trace the profile, but guess what? When you BEND a 48" dowel, it doesn't cover 48" any longer. So, you have to REALLY take your time doing this and improvise, because unless you have like a 54" dowel, you can't simply shift the 48" one and trace it in the two stages necessary to trace each half of the profile.
The bends that results, the radiuses, are totally DIFFERENT!
To clarify, just think of one sheet of ply, one side. The front half requires two stages, it needs a shift of the dowel, and the back half requires the same. This results in a totally different outline than using just one really long dowel, because each little tension, nail point, radically affects the curvature of that dowel.
So, because I only had a 48" dowel (and I assume that's all that's available anyway), I had to shift my "P" point like an inch on the X (left/right) axis. Not doing so resulted in a VERY ugly profile. (And God bless Tom for telling me to take my time with this!) It made a WORLD of difference modifying the position of that one point just one inch, and I would have hated myself later if I hadn't done it.
4) Thank you Kevin/Kuffel, for telling us on like page 6, 7, whatever...to create a right angle jig to support the side walls so they're perpendicular while attaching. The actual words were something like, "There are a few things you have to do NOW before you get started!"
Well, thank God (Mabutoo) that I didn't listen to him, and that after cutting the first wall, I looked at the waste pieces and thought, "Gee! Each of these "waste" pieces has two straight, clean, factory edges at a 90 degree angle! I can use THESE and attach 2 X 2's to make my right angle jigs!" (Boo again, Kuffel. Is this a TEST?)
5) Anyway, 6 hours later, I have my sides and door cutouts all cut and sanded, in addition to my exterior side skins. (I used the walls as templates.) Did I screw up at all?
Yes:
I was very excited to have decided on my final door dimensions a while ago, and that the bottom of the openings would "start" two inches up, to accommodate a 4-inch or so mattress. (I actually got sexually excited thinking about this cut last Tuesday.) So I have the first door outline all marked and traced, which is a vertical rectangle with a small half-moon circle at the very TOP.
I decided to go 29 wide by 35 high, because both my wife and I are really small and short, though not technically midgets. (We have those munchkins beat by at least 5, 6 inches.)
And as I'm cutitng the first side of that first door, getting aroused as I approach that bottom 2-inch mark, I realize, "SHMUCK! That's 2 inches PLUS 2 inches, to accommodate the 2 inches that gets attached to the 2 by 2 frame!!!
And I only overshot it by an inch and a half.
So, out came the wood filler, plus Elmer's Polyurethane Ultimate Glue, and I made the repair. Structurally, totally insignificant, but man, was I pissed. (Can I say "pissed," Mike?) After the repair, I retraced/marked the sides and top radius to now CORRECTLY follow my original plans.
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Anyway, that's it, and during this whole ordeal, my wife wasn't in the greatest of moods....but who cares? My sides and side skins are cut!
Sorry if this was a little long-winded, but I sincerely hope this info helps some other first-time builders.