I've got a number of long miters to glue-up shortly and I'm hoping to
improve both speed and accuracy. I've got several finished-end panels
that need to be joined to the face frame via a miter joint, at the
clients request. (Straight grained doug fir, he wants it to look like
a timber corner.)
What I typically do is tape the outside of the joint, fold it together,
and clamp it to some right-angle pieces. Maybe tap in a pinch dog at
each end if it looks open at that end. Occasionally there's a slight
gap at a spot. Biggest thing is cutting the joints well, I know that.
Just wondering if anyone's got a panacea or two.
JP
********************
Lock miter, anyone?
For "edgebanding" plywood by cutting off 3/4" at a 45 degree angle,
then turning it around and gluing it on the end, I wind up with a
long (and somewhat warped/twisted) piece to miter
Anyway, I just put down a sheet of polyethylene over a flat surface
and lay it down (usually it's a shelf) and clamp it down along the
edges, slather glue in the usual places,
and clamp them both ways (slowly tighting each of them so
one doesn't overpower the other). Any gaps get another clamp.
Since the edgeband piece's point is basically getting clamped down
into the workbench, you have to be careful not to crush it though,
and the fir is pretty soft.
The polyethelyene will prevent it from sticking, when glue dry sand off
excess glue. The glue actually takes an eternity to dry under the poly.
Jay Pique <[email protected]> wrote:
> I've got a number of long miters to glue-up shortly and I'm hoping to
> improve both speed and accuracy. I've got several finished-end panels
> that need to be joined to the face frame via a miter joint, at the
> clients request. (Straight grained doug fir, he wants it to look like
> a timber corner.)
>
> What I typically do is tape the outside of the joint, fold it together,
> and clamp it to some right-angle pieces. Maybe tap in a pinch dog at
> each end if it looks open at that end. Occasionally there's a slight
> gap at a spot. Biggest thing is cutting the joints well, I know that.
> Just wondering if anyone's got a panacea or two.
>
> JP
> ********************
> Lock miter, anyone?
>
"Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I've got a number of long miters to glue-up shortly and I'm hoping to
> improve both speed and accuracy. I've got several finished-end panels
> that need to be joined to the face frame via a miter joint, at the
> clients request. (Straight grained doug fir, he wants it to look like
> a timber corner.)
>
> What I typically do is tape the outside of the joint, fold it together,
> and clamp it to some right-angle pieces. Maybe tap in a pinch dog at
> each end if it looks open at that end. Occasionally there's a slight
> gap at a spot. Biggest thing is cutting the joints well, I know that.
> Just wondering if anyone's got a panacea or two.
I join the miter to give myself a leg up. Seems there's always a problem
with mitering over any length on a tablesaw.
Last set of carcasses I used the L outside, 2x2 inside. Making the outside
one sturdy is what I consider key. It's got to exert pressure evenly over a
distance. The legs of the L meet at ~85 degrees and are overcut on the
tablesaw -blade's higher than the fence distance- to create a little extra
pocket where the tips of the miter can slip without crushing and glue ooze
without sticking, though if I do it again, I'll wax 'em. If you're doing
more than four, you should.
If the distance is excessive, even that might not be enough, so you might
have to go to clamping one piece to the table and wedging your supported
other piece along your caul/clamp. Plan "A" seemed to work all right at
30" on 3/4 stock.