i was really hoping you would chime in!!!!
the wood that was removed or "skinned" as i was trying to make it look, was a 2 steps forward, one step back process, i found no good instructions
first step was to use a chainsaw and make cuts into the top (level as possible to the earth) about 1" deep....i did that about ever 1/2 and was hoping to easily chisel the leftovers out......nope....the wood was way too wet and tough and the gouges that were left were deep.
i switched to an electric planer (first time using it....mistake lol) and got it really close but i was getting to the point that i was making a new mark everytime i successfully removed another.
at that point i switched back to the chisels for the rough transitions and then sanded a lot with a palm sander....my dad (way monday morning quarterback) casually mentions "oh you should have borrowed my belt sander"........(annoyed look, stunned silence)
and then i priced out the west systems epoxy, picked myself up off the floor and bought a tin of UV stable poly
the "X" is two 4x4s with basically a half lap joint in the middle and that is glued and screwed (not at the dowels stage of my abilities yet)
i used four 4" deck screws through the inside edges of the "X" and into the log, they are hidden but removable.
the cool thing about the bench (in my opinion) is the way it look precarious. it is not only because of the limited ways it would be able to move- there is approximately 17" of 1' steel pipe in the ground at close to a 45 degree angle to the seating surface.
the log cannot move left to right at all- i am large (6'4" 200+ pounds, i ran at this and jumped into the side repeatedly to set the pipe in the ground. once i could not move it at all i did it about 12 more times. it has zero play side to side.
it is also really stable front to back for the same reason but i would not do any jump tests only due to the sandy soil - so, the only thing i wanted the x to do was hold it up.
i will admit i thought about a third leg but i had zero idea how to execute that so i would LOVE to know what you had in mind
when you are a beginner and the MASSIVE universe of the tricks and tools is just opening, you find a way to make due with what is in the "toolbox" but that is not how one learns.....
lay it on me, sir!!
---------- Post added at 11:14 AM ---------- Previous post was at 11:13 AM ----------
i meant to put this in the first post- here is the seat
Untitled by
J Solo, on Flickr