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Yes, very interested here, too.What are you using to make the curved wood? Are you laminating strips of luaun? Or a veneer? It's not quite clear in the photos.
I presume you ease the cut edges with sandpaper or maybe a router for the laminated boards. My experience so far with lauan is that it is splintery and sharp, and generally a handling hazard if it's not laminated to something or the edges are rounded.
Thanks. I believe I found the method I'm going to use to build my free-mo curves! Also, could you give some insight on the PC ties at you intermodule joints.Donnell
Donnell,Originally I had been using 1/2" (or 3/4") brass #4 wood screws into the frame at the ends, with the rails soldered to the tops; but recently changed to using American Tie and Timber "Gapmaster" PC tie assemblies at the ends. This photo shows both:The "Gapmaster" tie assemblies were originally intended for keeping rails aligned when cutting insulating gaps in flextrack, but I find that they're also great for keeping rails aligned at module joints. They're already set up with a break in the cladding to prevent rail-to-rail shorts, so pretty much all I do is lay out their position with a scale rule, glue them down with thick CA, and solder the rails to the top. Then once they're painted to blend with the flextrack, they're not nearly as obvious as the brass screws are. They also give a much more consistent height than the screws, as well as assuring that the rails are truly square with the module end.--Drew