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Tinker Tuesday for December 2, 2025

This thread is for anyone working on personal projects to share their progress, and hold themselves somewhat accountable to a group of peers.

Post your project, your progress from last week, and what you hope to accomplish this week.

If you want to be pinged with a reminder asking about your project, let me know, and I'll harass you each week until you cancel the service

Jump in the discussion.

No email address required.

For a flat/regular-ish surface like a table, you'd be frikken amazed how fast a steel cabinet scraper will definish -- you can get a pack of them for like ten bucks on Amazon and never have to deal with goo or environmentalists again.

I forgot to mention that they are veneered, so abrasives are out.

It's not abrasive -- depending on the nature of the veneer I bet it would work fine. Very little material is removed per pass, but once you get under a layer of finish it comes off like magic. I've mostly been using mine to get the 70s varnish off some gun stocks; you need to sand a little in the crannies in that case, but with a table it should be very little.

You can get expensive ones at Lee Valley and such that I'm sure are better steel, but I bought something like these guys, and it's fine:

https://www.amazon.com/HERMIT-TOOLS-Burnisher-Multi-Shaped-Rectangle/dp/B0CJRW4C66/

(More like 20 bucks I guess; inflation, amirite?)

It's an interesting idea but I think I'll try it first on a project that's not veneered. Would hate to scrape off the veneer and ruin these at this point.

Try it on a scrap of anything with old paint and you'll see what I mean -- it's not like a normal paint scraper, there's a burr on the edge so you hold it almost 90 degrees to the work and pull towards you with both hands. It does make shavings, but very very thin ones -- less than a thousandth of an inch I'd say? Much thinner that what you see in those Japanese planing contests, and easy to control by how hard you bear down.