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I have been wanting to make a lazy Suzan for my dining table, I finally made not one but decided to make two of them, made from merbau timber 70mm x 19mm, 385mm diameter to suit my dining table, finished with water based clear satin varnish.
I also made a jig to router the circles on my router table.
Lazy suzan mechanism
Jig made to finish routing the circles.
Brilliant!
I'm not a smart man, so it took me a little time to figure out your jig above, or I think I have. The wood is cut into a rough circle, mounted to the Susan bracket which is on the jig, pushed forward (via the slotted bolts) onto the router blade - and rotated?
Very nice router table!
Use to love these things in Chinese restaurants.
You've inspired me to make one - so that it fits over a gas heater stem in the middle of an outdoor table.
Where did you get the Lazy Susan hardware kit from?
Hi @JoeAzza
Thank you so much for sharing your Lazy Susan project. Your method of making a jig and cutting the timber using the Susan bracket to rotate the timber is truly inspirational. It took me a moment to figure out how it was done until @Noyade explained the method. What glue did you use to stick the timbers together? This would make an excellent gift to friends and family.
Again, thank you for sharing your Lazy Susan project, we look forward to seeing your next creation.
Eric
Hi @Noyade
It's great that @JoeAzza's project has inspired you to make your own Lazy Susan. Here is the link to the Lazy Susan Bearing Plates. They come in different sizes and weight-bearing capacities. Please choose carefully before purchasing your preferred bearing. Any updates you can provide while building your own Lazy Susan would be much appreciated.
If you need further assistance, please let us know.
Eric
Thank you, @Noyade you are correct, that's the way I made my router jig.
The hardware for the Lazy Susan is from Bunnings, they have various size.
I found out later that Bunnings sell precut circle timber at various sizes, saves a lot of work in gluing timber together, then cutting/routing to size, you might just need to re cut to the required diameter. (see second image below).
It's more fun making your own from scratch.
Hi @EricL thank you, the glue I used is Titebond 3, it's a water resistance glue, not available from Bunnings.
Would you know if there is an equivalent available from Bunnings, it needs to be water resistant and food grade or better.
Hi @JoeAzza
The closest equivalent I've seen is Gorilla 532ml Wood Glue. It passes the ANSI/HPVA Type II water resistance and complies with the FDA #CFR21 175.105.
Eric
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