Patience my furry little friend.
CAT WHEEL-ISHThe next couple of steps resulted in some trial and error experiments on my behalf, which I wont bore you with at this stage, but as a result there are a few extra drilled holes and some misaligned wood pieces here and there. Nothing major in terms of function or aesthetic, it's all part of the learning curve.
THE FRAME, part 2
In order to give the upright beam of the frame greater stability I added support beams to either side. When I bought my cheap hand saw it came with a cut guide which had the 45 degree angle that I needed to make the beams fit. I dont know how much support the frame actually needs but I decided that having it connect with the upright higher and the bottom base wider would make the most sense in terms of dispersing weight and movement. But I might be wrong. I measured the wood, starting from where it would be at the widest it could go on base (just on the inside of the screws that connect the base to the legs) and then the 45 degree angle cuts determined how far up the frame they would go.
Once again the good ole timber screws were used to connect the supports at the top and bottom. Im not aware of the best technique for connecting screws at the angle, so my approach was more "ram it in until it goes in right" rather than a specific technique. The main thing I tried to keep an eye on was that the screws that connect to the upright would not run into the ones from the other side of the upright, hence the ones in the picture being a little off center.
THE TRACK, part 2
The task now was to clamp and drill the 3mm plywood track sheets onto the 18 beams. I clamped all the pieces into place so I could get the positioning close enough before finalising their placement with drilling. The drilling was easy enough, but I made sure to gently press on the back of the beams so that there was counter pressure on the opposite side I was drilling into as I wasnt too sure of the stability of the individual beams to take the pressure of the drilling. Due to working about 8-10mm in from the circumference of the circle there was enough overlap of the sheets to allow the joins to occur at a beam so the screw would go through two sheets and into the beam where the separate sheets meet. The plan it to put a yoga mat over the track surface so the cats have something more comfortable to run on, which I am hoping to smooth out the join.
I drilled through the plywood into each beam at the base and near the end of the beam to hold down the track. I made sure that I gave sufficient room at each end so these smaller screws don't run into the larger timber screws holding the beams to the circle and the screws that will eventually be inserted into the exposed end of the beams for the cover (more on that later). Then, after 18 beams, four plywood sheets and some choice curse words when the screws wanted to abide by gravity rather than doing what I wanted them to do, I ended up with something that doesn't look unlike a cat wheel.
Excitement building.
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