saves a whack of time!
I have always sort of free-handed the assembly of my boxes, precariously balancing an end piece on top of 2 sides while I glue, pre-drill and screw, often with everything falling onto the floor. I decided recently (yesterday
) that there had to be an easy and better way. I may have seen something like this before cause I sure never dreamt it up on the spot or even thought of it as an idea, so to whomever came up with this, thanks.
I just took a scrap piece of 3/4" plywood, set a built box on it and screwed 4 pieces of scrap lumber around the base edge to form a ......form, I guess.
I now just set my 4 pieces into the jig, make sure everything lines up the way I want, pull out one end, glue, spread the glue, set the piece back in place, pre-drill and then screw. If anything needs a pry or adjustment, a hive tool quickly slips down any side and acts as a lever. I can do a box in about 5 minutes if everything goes well, with little room for error. Next stop will be handholds once I've got this bunch done.
Don't get too far ahead of yourself when milling your wood. If you cut too much some of it can start to cup if you wait too long to put them together. I have 2,000 feet of pine, enough to do about 280 boxes. I just milled a little over 60, and when this bunch is done I'll mill another batch.