On Wed, 08 Dec 2004 22:36:21 GMT, TWS <[email protected]> wrote:
>This is the first meaningful explanation I've seen to help set the
>drill bit WRT the chisel.
It would be even clearer if I could spell "thicker" !
You are always going to have some breakout of the surface veneer of
pretty much any plywood when you try to jam a punch through it, which
is what is essentially what you are doing (I'm assuming from your post
that you are using a square chisel mortise attachment or mortiser.
If you wanted, you could use a very sharp razor knofe and score/cut the
surface first. Yes, that is a bit manual intensive, requires layout
that a mortiser typicially helps you avoid, but if you want clean cuts
in plywood, I couldn't see any other way top get it.
BW
"TWS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> This is the first meaningful explanation I've seen to help set the
> drill bit WRT the chisel. The Delta manual simply said the distance
> between the drill and the chisel will vary depending on the type of
> wood without *any* explanation for the relationship. In the words of
Agreed - charlie b's "Fisch" 40 cent setting trick made things much nicer
with mine...
You can try extending the drill bit further out from the cone, or else don't
do it.
max
> Having difficulties mortising BB but not hardwoods. Have the
> sharpening cones and have used but when the chisel starts into the
> wood that's where it ends, at the surface. Cure is (1) pull harder,
> (2) use sharpening cones, (3) don't mortise BB?
On Wed, 08 Dec 2004 18:38:53 +0000, Andy Dingley
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>Soft timber expands more on turning it into chips. Try setting the
>auger up to leave a little more space between it and the chisel. If
>you use the "nickel trick" to set the chisel & auger position, use a
>slightly thinker nickel.
This is the first meaningful explanation I've seen to help set the
drill bit WRT the chisel. The Delta manual simply said the distance
between the drill and the chisel will vary depending on the type of
wood without *any* explanation for the relationship. In the words of
a Japanese friend of mine - wakarimasu, now I understand!
Thanks!
TWS
On Wed, 08 Dec 2004 09:41:19 -0500, "[email protected]"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Having difficulties mortising BB but not hardwoods.
Soft timber expands more on turning it into chips. Try setting the
auger up to leave a little more space between it and the chisel. If
you use the "nickel trick" to set the chisel & auger position, use a
slightly thinker nickel.