Dip the ends of the rough stock in liquid paraffin. When you first get them.
& inspect the hell of them before cutting.
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Dip the ends of the rough stock in liquid paraffin. When you first get them.
& inspect the hell of them before cutting.
There are tool steel blanks with 1/2" shanks.
Not normal. The speed control is on the way out.
Don't know why PC has had so much trouble with speed controllers. But they do. The 518's were terrible.
I have had a 6 7518's. And this last one, a...
It will, if you if you have 200-300' of it.
It will produce a wear line.
Less so, if it's solid carbide.
If you can tolerate a 1/2" tool, I'd recommend solid carbide.
It will last much longer than brazed-on.
& if you can tolerate insert tooling the inserts will last as long as solid carbide.
...
Best up/down trimmer adjuster: R2401 Ridgid, if that is critical.
Want to make jigs? The life's blood of woodworking.
Jigs are held together with fasteners, rarely joinery.
Can't drill? Can't make jigs.
It will be a struggle with a router.
Your job, something you don't want to hear, is for
the shaper. Dozens of cutter choices, the power,
and, of course, expensive.
Used to be a PC vendor. Am well in tune with all models.
Had a theft, had to get a 7518 and 690 PK.
Still as good as ever, a pity they're not made in Jackson any more.
Doors, drawers, windows, and architectural profiles for the shaper.
Everything else for the router table.
CTR, (complimentary Templet routing), is tricky stuff.
It can be a 3 step process. A master templet is created. From that, 2 working templets are created. And from that, the work is generated....
I don't understand, all that to move a fence back & forth?
There must be something I'm missing.
What's the advantage of such a thing?
Not what you want to hear. But I've never flattened anything with sun or water tricks.
I had to re-mill or scrap.
Drill Template, on appropriate centers & diameters for the job.
If you want to continue to use.
With 2 sticks exactly the same width, measure & prove the translational offset.
Next use a feeler for the work that goes against that stop. Displace the work x the...
Not what you want to hear, I'm sure.
Drill presses are made for drilling not sanding.
Rule out that folly.
A drill tip might be 8-12" from the last bearing in the quill, (if a 5" travel quill is...
Maybe that's why you have it, (the co. didn't want it).
Notwithstanding, I've seen the behavior in a lot of species.
But rarely.
And when I do, I climb cut. And even some stock, in a climb cut, ...
"what a good thickness would be? "
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Mark, using conventional c-clamps: 5/16 - 3/8
Using toggles (you might bend the plate): 3/8 - 1/2
Equipped with Table lift crank: 3/8 -...
Where can I source such a jig plate?
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Any where aluminum is sold or mcmastercarr if you wanna pay the max.
Not relevant to the original/first post, but an option, nevertheless.
MIC-6 an Alcoa ground aluminum jig plate is flat.
Not only flat, but stiff, and of uniform thickness.
Heavy, not for DP tables...
Yes, there should be concern.
In 18" W, you may get a 3/16" - 5/16"/year in width.
If there is some slop where the seat meets the back legs,
I would not sweat.
Nearly 7' long! I suspect, even with skinny wood and loaded, the box will weigh 20+ pounds. Maybe it needs wheels!
I'd make the thing with SS joint connector bolts. A simple connection; will not...
There is almost no way to predict the accurate location of a router bit.
Collars are rough, edge guides & base plates: same thing. Bearing are close but
cutter diameters are never what they say...
If you can get some 7"+wide 8/4, why not rip it, fold it in, and glue it. Not as sweet as 1/4 sawn or pasted on thick veneer. But stable and will pass if relatively straight grained.
Especially dark...
I would expect you'll use a ledger to support the box spring. Make that as thick as you'd like.
Next, clamp it to the twisted rail. See if that will flatten it.