On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 18:03:59 GMT, igor <[email protected]> wrote:
>I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4" dowel. I
>have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels, but not a lathe. I
>am looking for advice for an effective AND safe way to do this. TIA. --
Drill a hole in a large square block of wood to fit the dowel.
Insert, and use the wood block as the guide against the miter guage to
run it over the raised [just enough] table saw blade so as to take a
cut out of both. You'll need a block on the table as a guide if the
cut is well along the dowel. Otherwise drill the hole just deep
enough. Rotate the dowel in the hole as you are cutting. not the
best, but relatively safe and will do the job. Measure on the outside
of the dowel to move in and out to cover the 3/4" width.
You might have ot experiment with the first cut, raising the blade
slowly after checking each cut to get the right depth.
When finished, count your fingers and get a lathe.
Alternative... do you have a router/table?
"Guess who" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Drill a hole in a large square block of wood to fit the dowel.
> Insert, and use the wood block as the guide against the miter guage to
> run it over the raised [just enough] table saw blade so as to take a
> cut out of both. You'll need a block on the table as a guide if the
> cut is well along the dowel. Otherwise drill the hole just deep
> enough. Rotate the dowel in the hole as you are cutting. not the
> best, but relatively safe and will do the job. Measure on the outside
> of the dowel to move in and out to cover the 3/4" width.
>
Close to what I was going to suggest. I'd forgo the wood block though.
Simply lay the dowel in the front of the miter gauge and pass it over the
blade, rotate it at the high point of the blade. Of course, it does depend
on how long the dowel is. Too short and this idea doesn't work.
--
-Mike-
[email protected]
On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 21:04:05 GMT, with neither quill nor qualm, igor
<[email protected]> quickly quoth:
>I'd thought about that unadorned approach -- just wondering what could turn
>the dowel into a missile or otherwise move it dangerously. That's why I
>posted.
Build a jig for your router and make it in that.
--------------------------------------------------
I survived the D.C. Blizzard of 2003 (from Oregon)
----------------------------
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Mike Marlow wrote:
>
> "Guess who" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > Drill a hole in a large square block of wood to fit the dowel.
> > Insert, and use the wood block as the guide against the miter guage to
> > run it over the raised [just enough] table saw blade so as to take a
> > cut out of both. You'll need a block on the table as a guide if the
> > cut is well along the dowel. Otherwise drill the hole just deep
> > enough. Rotate the dowel in the hole as you are cutting. not the
> > best, but relatively safe and will do the job. Measure on the outside
> > of the dowel to move in and out to cover the 3/4" width.
> >
>
> Close to what I was going to suggest. I'd forgo the wood block though.
> Simply lay the dowel in the front of the miter gauge and pass it over the
> blade, rotate it at the high point of the blade. Of course, it does depend
> on how long the dowel is. Too short and this idea doesn't work.
>
Just do it on the dowel before cutting it to length...
I'd use a guide block though simply to make it simpler to keep from
moving at an angle away from the face of the miter gauge...probably
simpler than the above would be simply a tubafore w/ a 45 whacked off
one side clamped against the gauge for the dowel to sit in....
igor (in [email protected]) said:
| I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4"
| dowel. I have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels,
| but not a lathe. I am looking for advice for an effective AND safe
| way to do this. TIA. -- Igor
Do you have a drill press?
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html
On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 15:20:25 -0400, "Mike Marlow"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>"Guess who" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>>
>> Drill a hole in a large square block of wood to fit the dowel.
>> Insert, and use the wood block as the guide against the miter guage to
>> run it over the raised [just enough] table saw blade so as to take a
>> cut out of both. You'll need a block on the table as a guide if the
>> cut is well along the dowel. Otherwise drill the hole just deep
>> enough. Rotate the dowel in the hole as you are cutting. not the
>> best, but relatively safe and will do the job. Measure on the outside
>> of the dowel to move in and out to cover the 3/4" width.
>>
>
>Close to what I was going to suggest. I'd forgo the wood block though.
>Simply lay the dowel in the front of the miter gauge and pass it over the
>blade, rotate it at the high point of the blade. Of course, it does depend
>on how long the dowel is. Too short and this idea doesn't work.
I'd thought about that unadorned approach -- just wondering what could turn
the dowel into a missile or otherwise move it dangerously. That's why I
posted.
And NO, I will not use the fence AND the miter guage -- though I think
using the miter guage stop would help. Thanks. -- Igor
You can drill a 3/4 hole through some plywood glued up to 5 or 6 inches
thick and drill a hole through the edge at right angles to the dowel. Use a
template guide on the router and insert it through the hole. Plunge the
router and turn the dowel with a clamp to route the groove. You can add
stops to the dowel so you get the correct width of groove.
max
> On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 18:03:59 GMT, igor <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4" dowel. I
>> have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels, but not a lathe. I
>> am looking for advice for an effective AND safe way to do this. TIA. --
>
> Drill a hole in a large square block of wood to fit the dowel.
> Insert, and use the wood block as the guide against the miter guage to
> run it over the raised [just enough] table saw blade so as to take a
> cut out of both. You'll need a block on the table as a guide if the
> cut is well along the dowel. Otherwise drill the hole just deep
> enough. Rotate the dowel in the hole as you are cutting. not the
> best, but relatively safe and will do the job. Measure on the outside
> of the dowel to move in and out to cover the 3/4" width.
>
> You might have ot experiment with the first cut, raising the blade
> slowly after checking each cut to get the right depth.
>
> When finished, count your fingers and get a lathe.
>
> Alternative... do you have a router/table?
>
igor (in [email protected]) said:
| On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 13:14:02 -0500, "Morris Dovey"
| <[email protected]> wrote:
|
|| igor (in [email protected]) said:
||
||| I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4"
||| dowel. I have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels,
||| but not a lathe. I am looking for advice for an effective AND
||| safe way to do this. TIA. -- Igor
||
|| Do you have a drill press?
|
| Yes, I do.
Hot melt glue a short piece of smaller dowel to the end of your 3/4"
dowel, chuck the small dowel in the drill press, and use a small
rasp/sanding block to cut your groove. Use heat to remove the short
dowel when you're done.
This isn't really an elegant approach, but a drill press can serve as
a "poor man's lathe" for jobs like this where there isn't any
appreciable side loading. A bit of care in joining the two dowels can
help to minimize off-center wobble.
--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html
On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 13:14:02 -0500, "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>igor (in [email protected]) said:
>
>| I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4"
>| dowel. I have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels,
>| but not a lathe. I am looking for advice for an effective AND safe
>| way to do this. TIA. -- Igor
>
>Do you have a drill press?
Yes, I do.
On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 15:44:00 -0500, "Morris Dovey" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>igor (in [email protected]) said:
>
>| On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 13:14:02 -0500, "Morris Dovey"
>| <[email protected]> wrote:
>|
>|| igor (in [email protected]) said:
>||
>||| I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4"
>||| dowel. I have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels,
>||| but not a lathe. I am looking for advice for an effective AND
>||| safe way to do this. TIA. -- Igor
>||
>|| Do you have a drill press?
>|
>| Yes, I do.
>
>Hot melt glue a short piece of smaller dowel to the end of your 3/4"
>dowel, chuck the small dowel in the drill press, and use a small
>rasp/sanding block to cut your groove. Use heat to remove the short
>dowel when you're done.
>
>This isn't really an elegant approach, but a drill press can serve as
>a "poor man's lathe" for jobs like this where there isn't any
>appreciable side loading. A bit of care in joining the two dowels can
>help to minimize off-center wobble.
Clever. Maybe a hanger bolt would also work. In either case, I can use
the drill press vise as a rest for the rasp. Thanks. -- Igor
"Morris Dovey" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> igor (in [email protected]) said:
>
> | I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4"
> | dowel. I have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels,
> | but not a lathe. I am looking for advice for an effective AND safe
> | way to do this. TIA. -- Igor
>
> Do you have a drill press?
>
> --
> Morris Dovey
> DeSoto Solar
> DeSoto, Iowa USA
> http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/solar.html
>
That took my answer.
If not a drill clamped down.
Chris
Quick and easy with a router table
John
On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 18:03:59 GMT, igor <[email protected]> wrote:
>I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4" dowel. I
>have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels, but not a lathe. I
>am looking for advice for an effective AND safe way to do this. TIA. --
>Igor
On Sun, 25 Sep 2005 18:03:59 GMT, igor <[email protected]> wrote:
>I want to cut a 1/8" deep, 3/4" wide (long) groove around a 3/4" dowel. I
>have a TS and a BS, as well as a basic set of chisels, but not a lathe. I
>am looking for advice for an effective AND safe way to do this. TIA. --
>Igor
Centered 1/4" hanger bolt used as a a center, chuck it in your DP
(slow speed here in case off-center), file rasp or even a carefully
wielded chisel or knife.
I've done it with 1/2" that I could chuck directly, so you just need
a center.
Regards.