Woodsmith Magazine -april May 2009- !!exclusive!!

Could you clarify what you need? For example:

The side panel (M) should be cut to 15-1/4" wide , rather than the 15-1/2" originally listed. Woodsmith Magazine -April May 2009-

The April/May 2009 issue also featured a tool test that has aged well: a comparison of three 10-inch hybrid table saws. At the time, hybrid saws (cabinets with contractor-style motors) were displacing both contractor and entry-level cabinet saws. The review included: Could you clarify what you need

The centerpiece of the April/May 2009 issue was undoubtedly the "Classic Tool Cabinet." In the hierarchy of woodworking projects, a wall-hanging tool cabinet is often considered a rite of passage. It is a piece that is both highly functional and deeply personal—a home for the tools that define a woodworker's trade. At the time, hybrid saws (cabinets with contractor-style

– Before SketchUp and Fusion 360 became ubiquitous, Woodsmith's hand-drafted (later CAD-generated) isometric views were the gold standard. The mortiser jig drawings from this issue are still used as teaching aids in cabinetmaking schools.