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Thread: Squaring stock without a jointer

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Yardley, PA
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    94

    Squaring stock without a jointer

    Hi all.. I'm a relative newbie to woodworking. I'm attempting to get some dimensional lumber out of some live edge stock I had. The pieces are about 6' x 2' x 2.5". I've managed to flatten both sides using a router jig and a belt sander. My question is: how would I go about making this stock square so I can get some dimensional lumber from it? I do not have a jointer. I do have access to a table saw. Thanks!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Mar 2008
    Location
    Alpharetta, GA
    Posts
    193
    Hey William,

    Here's a link to a jig/sled for the tablesaw.

    Using your table saw as a jointer.

    You can also use offset router fences, a quick google search should get you started.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Escondido, CA
    Posts
    6,224
    You can tack a straight piece of lumber on the live edge side, parallel to the side that is closest to straight.
    Run that through the table saw with the tacked on straight piece against the fence.
    Now you have one straight edge.
    Take off the extra piece and run it through with the straight side against the fence.
    Veni Vidi Vendi Vente! I came, I saw, I bought a large coffee!

  4. #4
    Charles Neil's new Pie Safe series on YouTube does alot of this kind of work. I would use that as an additional reference:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GPZdz...eature=channel

  5. #5
    Some genius here gave me a method that takes about thirty seconds and costs almost nothing. You use a table saw with a good square fence and everything in tune. It really works. I'll attach a photo of the walnut guitar I'm working on. Six pieces of wood, and they all match perfectly.

    Get a piece of MDF. Cut a piece out, including one long factory-made side, which will be your reference. Make sure this side is straight. Put it against the saw fence.

    Drop your wood on the MDF with a quarter of an inch hanging out over the side facing the blade. Use double-sided tape to hold it in place.

    Run the wood through the saw, taking off 1/8". If your saw is in tune, you'll get an edge ready for joining. If your saw is not in tune, you may get an edge that isn't perfectly square. You can cheat by jointing the other board on the same saw and then flipping it so the perpendicularity errors cancel.

    I used a Wixey magnetic protractor to adjust the blade, and it was good enough for this job. No flipping; no cheating.

    01 21 11 walnut telecaster clone with mahogany for inlays.jpg
    Cry "Havoc," and let slip the dogs of bench.

    I was socially distant before it was cool.

    A little authority corrupts a lot.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    N.Y.
    Posts
    325
    Right around the 8-min mark, this video shows most of what has been mentioned in this thread.
    http://thewoodwhisperer.com/episode-...inters-jumpin/

    _

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    south bend, in
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    49
    I square stock all the time on my table saw. Make sure your blade is absolutely square to the top. I usually make smaller items where the length is equal or less than half the length of my fence. I just place the concave side against my fence and rip the other side. Then rip the concave side. For narrower pieces (less than the height of your saw blade) place the concave side against the fence, rip the other side, flip it 90 degrees, and rip the next side. You now have 2 adjacent sides square and flat. Either rip the other 2 sides to dimension or run it through the planer.

    Now for longer pieces (up to twice the length of my fence) I place the crown side against the fence and hold it steady as I run it through the blade, cutting off the ends of the concave side. Turn it around using the same face against the top and rip the crown side, cutting the middle section, making a longer flat edge; not quite as long as the board but long enough to have more of a reference against the fence. Keep doing this back and forth and you will wind up with 1 straight edge. Flip it 90 degrees and do the same to the other sides using the straight side against the top. You will then wind up with 2 flat and square adjacent sides. Again either rip the other 2 sides or run the board through the planer.
    work with wood - not against it

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    San Antonio TX
    Posts
    380
    If you have any hand planes...check out the Neanderthal haven, they squared lumber for hundreds of years before machinery was invented. A little time there will likely send you to Logan Cabinet shoppe website which has a video on doing this.
    That which does not kill you will likely raise your insurance premiums.

  9. #9
    I think I saw it on the Woodsmith Shop but can't currently find the link.

    It explained making a jig that clamps against the saw fence with plastic laminate on the outfeed side for a slight offset (similar to a jointer.) You then bury your blade in the sacrificial wood fence so the outside is flush with the laminate outfeed. This allows slight removal of material just like a vertical jointer. With no funds or room currently for a jointer I plan to use this method. Also, picked up a glueline rip blade that will help in the process.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Dec 2009
    Location
    Florida Panhandle
    Posts
    513
    I square up stock on my table saw frequently because it is so much easier faster than the jointer which no longer gets a lot of use. Except for warped stock where the jointer is faster than a plane.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2011
    Location
    Yardley, PA
    Posts
    94
    thanks for the advice everyone. I'm going to go ahead and use the table saw. Once I read the descriptions on how to do it I felt a bit dumb for not thinking of it myself. Thanks again!

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