bobw
Frequent Elocutionist
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Posts: 1925
Location: NW, Iowa
Joined: Mar 19 th, 2013
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Re: Next Project, Hepburn Walker Patent Configuration
Reply #469 - Oct 20th, 2025 at 4:20pm
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There was a thread on another forum, I follow, that started with the question "What tool do you use most while building?". While I did not enter in to that discussion, my first thought was pencil and eraser! I use them a lot. The following pictures are showing how I form these panels, but these are not the final panels. Once I start shaping the panel to final size and shape, I was afraid I would forget to take pictures so I did an oversized shaping just to show how, and what, I like them to look like. Photo 1. Here I have drawn out what I wanted the forearm side panel to look like. I always need to have an idea where I want to go with my shaping and, as always, with a pencil line drawing. This helps in a couple ways. First consistency between the two sides of the forearm. Second, it give you the boundaries, and a plan, to shape the panels. As can be seen the panel starts at the top edge of the forearm and extends, in an ark, around to the bottom sharp edge of the side flat of the steel action frame, not the very bottom of the frame. This lower pencil line should extend the line of the frame, into the panel making a nice flow between the two parts. This allows the bottom the forearm to be formed and blended up around and into this panel. Photo 2. I have started forming the forearm, bottom up, around and into the panel. Looking at where the wood meets the frame shows this at #1. By doing this the pencil lines would normally be removed, making the panel appear smaller than intended until I start working the width of the panel down to where it meets the frame #3. #2 is showing the shaped forearm which needs to blend into the panel. Photo 3. The #1 arrows are pointing to the area being blend from the forearm #2. With the solid red line I am just showing the the forearm in front of and below the panel needs to blend straight into the front and bottom of the panel. Photo 4. Again showing the forearm should blend into the front of the panel. Photo 5. While it's not done, the top of the panel is also blended into the forearm, right down to the barrel, as shown by the arrows. Bob
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