Woodwork
- Do the following:
- Describe how timber is grown, harvested, and milled. Tell how lumber
is cured, seasoned, graded, and sized.
- Collect and label blocks of six kinds of wood useful in woodworking.
Describe the chief qualities of each. Give the best uses of each.
- Do the following:
- Show proper care and use of all working tools and equipment which you
own or use at home or school.
- Sharpen correctly the cutting edges of two tools.
- Make something useful of wood. Use a saw, plane, hammer, and brace and bit
to make it. Cut parts from lumber which you have measured and squared from
working drawings.
- Do the following:
- Make a working drawing of a carpentry project. List the material
needed.
- Make it. Report on time spent and cost of things used.
- Do any TWO of the following:
- Make working drawings of a project needing-(1) Beveled or rounded
edges or curved or incised cuttings. (2) Miter, dowel, or mortise and
tenon joints. Make it.
- Make something for which you have to turn duplicate parts on a lathe.
- Make a cabinet, box, or something else with a door or lid fastened
with inset hinges.
- Help make and repair wooden toys for needy children; or help carry out
a carpentry service project.
- Make a scale model of a house or barn.
- Talk with a cabinetmaker or carpenter. Find out the job opportunities and
conditions, needed training, apprenticeship, work hours, pay rates, and
union organization for woodworking craftsmen where you live.
All requirements taken from Boy Scout Requirements, #33215E, revised
2002.
© 2002 Boy Scouts of America