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A rectangular solid has 6 surfaces. For purposes of discussion, we will call them:
We also had a nice plan to make all the sides out of a single 4'x8' sheet of plywood, But at the last minute we made a change that used significantly more wood.
Original plan to make all the sides from a single sheet of plywood.
We suggest that you do it this way - not the way we did it.
The crate was assembled with Elmers Carpenters Glue on all wood-to-wood joints.
The crate was also assembled with screws,
holding until the carpenter's glue dried.
In some cases, we had to remove some screws after the glue was dried.
Here, the nice, big piece of fine plywood gets ripped up.
You end up with a pile of slats.
The slats are jumbled up, so they look like they came from different pieces of wood.
Make sure they look pretty good together before permanent attachment.
Small gaps between the planks are good - the let fog and light leak out.
Here is a collection of slats, glued and screwed to the 1x3" top and bottom.
Some more 1x3" wood pieces strengthen the panel and make it look better.
Here's the back side, showing the numerous screws.
The side panel that the Beast crashes out of is split top-to-bottom to form doors that burst open.
The panel was made in a single unit, and then cut after everything else had been fit together.
In order to minimize the gap between the side panel doors and the rest of the crate,
David used his router to mortice the hinges into the frame.
The top was made from a simple sheet of plywood, framed with 1x3" wood.
As usual, we used glue and screws.
This photo shows some clamps used to hold everything in position while driving the screws.
Completed lid.
Here's the back side, showing the numerous screws.
The lid is attached to the crate on the back edge using two metal hinges.
The smallest hinges that looked strong enough to use were still too large
for the mounting location.
We bent them to fit, using a hammer and vise.
Then we cut them to fit with a hacksaw, and dressed them with a file.
The hinge will fit like this.
The hinges are attached with heavy screws.
The bottom of the crate was basically a flat piece of plywood.
We cut a hole in the bottom to facilitate passage of power and air lines.
This is the first time we got all of the panels together.
David checks out the lid of the crate.
Dennis tries on the crate for size.
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