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? asked in Home & GardenDo It Yourself (DIY) · 3 weeks ago

How do I speed up my woodworking projects ?

I'm building furniture such as coffee tables, end tables and benches etc for some extra cash. The part that seems to be slowing me down the most is sanding and the finishing process as it has to dry (Priming, staining and clear coat) Any tips to speed up this process so I can build more and finish these time consuming projects? I understand I'm a one man team working with decent tools, any tips to speed up the process. How does industry pump out these things so quickly? Besides the extra labor and capital. 

10 Answers

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  • Anonymous
    3 weeks ago

    Read books or Google it.  I know so I have been there done that.

  • 3 weeks ago

    Aunque se trate de trabajos manuales, siempre hay que pensar en qué es lo que hace que la industrialización supere a lo manual. La respuesta es el trabajo en serie. Ahí puede estar tu solución: por ejemplo te planteas hacer cinco mesas iguales. En un primer paso cortas todas las maderas para las cinco mesas. Luego lijas todas las mesas, luego barnizas todas las mesas, etc. El trabajo en serie aumenta la productividad. Y como bien lo dijiste: lo principal es contar con buenas herramientas. Aquí puedes conseguir cosas interesantes- https://ferretenet.com/

  • Dixon
    Lv 7
    3 weeks ago

    You should be working on several projects at once so that when one is drying you work on the others.

  • ?
    Lv 7
    3 weeks ago

    There is no way to speed up sanding, it is what it has alwasy been. Of course you can use power sanders to get it most of the way there, but you still need to feel, by hand, when finishing.  You can also get clear coats that dry faster then others, but it is still a time consuming process to do it properly. Best to be working on other projects while one or two are drying, need separate areas for that also.

    Feel the pumped out ones, you can still find flaws in the finished sanding and such. There are shows/videos as to how manufactures finishes these items, you can't replicate it at home.

  • Anonymous
    3 weeks ago

    Have two commissions on the go. Buy decent materials that require the minimum of finishing and while one is in the clamps, be working on the next one. You can't compete with Ikea who produce their iconic bookcases at the rate of one every three SECONDS, so there is no point in trying.

  • 3 weeks ago

    There is a reason well built hand crafted furniture costs more than mass produced junk.  It takes the craftsman time to do it right. 

    Practice and experience will shave some time from your production, but hand crafted is not fast.

  • Anonymous
    3 weeks ago

    use quicker drying products, lacquer dries in minutes

  • 3 weeks ago

    If you are asking how to do things faster, instead of stronger, I recommend NEVER buying anything you make.

    You literally stated you want to sacrifice quality for quantity.

  • 3 weeks ago

    ask someone to help you do it

  • Lisa A
    Lv 7
    3 weeks ago

    Pipeline the process.

    While project A is drying, work on building project B.

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