| Making the drawers for the storage cabinet I made the drawers for this storage cabinet all out of plywood.
With drawers this deep and panel door style fronts, wood movement for solid wood drawers
this deep would have been a concern, so plywood was a good choice.
The other reason for that was that I had lots of used plywood of the right size 
kicking around, and this would be a good way to use it up. The drawer fronts came from a kitchen that was torn out of a friend's basement. They were almost new. 
 With the 48-tooth crank gear against the 12-tooth gear on the threaded rod, I'd get 1/4" (6 mm) of advance per turn, so I'd need a total of three crank turns to get the 3/4" advance to the next finger. To make a 3/8" wide cut (0.375"), I'd need my furthest cuts to be spaced just 0.275" apart because the saw blade's kerf of 0.100" would bring it up to 0.375". With each crank turn advancing the stock by 0.250", that meant I'd have to make cuts throughout one crank turn, and another cut 0.025" past the end of the first turn. 0.025" is one tenth of a turn, or about five teeth on the gear. So I had to make cuts through one turn of the crank, then one more cut five teeth past that, and then turn the crank nearly two turns to get to the start of the next set of cuts. I had all my cut positions marked with bits of black tape on the gear. It seemed like a sequence that would be easy to miss-count and screw up, but it turned out to be fairly easy and I didn't make any mistakes. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 You can also see some lettering stamped to the side of the drawer - that was on the wood already, it's part of the words "Trinity United Church". Gives the furniture a bit of character as to where the materials came from. The entire storage cabinet is made from recycled bits of wood from many different sources. More about Wooden drawers Back to building a storage cabinet | 
