In article <[email protected]>, BErney1014
<[email protected]> wrote:
> I'm looking for a site showing how to rout an oval. No luck so far. I'm
> regluing a warped round butcher block table top. After the rip cuts are made
> it
> will be changed to an oval. Any diy sites hiding?
There are two methods of laying out an ellipse here:
http://benchnotes.com/Laying%20out%20an%20oval/laving_out_an_oval.htm
--
http://sawdustmaking.com
> I'm looking for a site showing how to rout an oval. No luck so far. I'm
> regluing a warped round butcher block table top. After the rip cuts are
made it
> will be changed to an oval. Any diy sites hiding?
Here's an idea
http://www.nicks.ca/Toolkits.html#oval
I've seen various plans for DIY oval jigs over the years. If you're near a
decent bookstore or library check out some the of router books and
jig-building books.
In article <[email protected]>,
[email protected] (BErney1014) wrote:
> I'm looking for a site showing how to rout an oval. No luck so far. I'm
> regluing a warped round butcher block table top. After the rip cuts are made
> it
> will be changed to an oval. Any diy sites hiding?
If you mean you want to route the edge after you've cut the top, that's
one thing. To do that you cut the oval first, then use a router bit with
a bearing that will run along the edge while the bit cuts the profile
you want. If you're planning on using the router to trim the table to an
oval, that's going to be tougher. You'd probably have to make a template
the bearing on the bit could ride on to cut the top to the oval shape in
several passes as butcher block is usually thick. You would cut your
oval in MDF, and sand the edges smooth. Then attach that template to the
butcher block and use a straight cutting bit with a bearing set so the
bearing runs against the template. You could fasten the template to the
bottom of the BB top with some drywall screws since you wouldn't see
that side, then cut your top slowly keeping the bit against the
template. I'm assuming that you wouldn't be taking huge amounts of wood
off the top.
--
Thanks,
Ham
BErney1014 wrote:
> I'm looking for a site showing how to rout an oval. No luck so far. I'm
> regluing a warped round butcher block table top. After the rip cuts are made it
> will be changed to an oval. Any diy sites hiding?
The easy and inexpensive way: draw the oval on a piece of 1/4"
plywood and cut it out - I'd use a bandsaw to cut it slightly
oversize and a sander to trim it to the line.
Clamp this template to your top and rout it to shape - perhaps
routing one side, then "leapfrogging" the clamps and routing the
other side.
You can construct an oval template using a pencil, two push pins
and a string loop. Push the two pins into the long centerline of
the oval, put the string loop around them, and pull the string
snug with the pencil point. With the string snugged by the
pencil, draw the largest shape you can around the pins.
You can find useful info on spacing the pins and string length
with a Google search on "ellipse major minor pin string".
HTH
--
Morris Dovey
West Des Moines, Iowa USA
C links at http://www.iedu.com/c
Read my lips: The apple doesn't fall far from the tree.
Draw an oval, use that to make a template and then use a pattern
cutting bit on the router and the template
John
On 07 Feb 2004 17:50:44 GMT, [email protected] (BErney1014) wrote:
>I'm looking for a site showing how to rout an oval. No luck so far. I'm
>regluing a warped round butcher block table top. After the rip cuts are made it
>will be changed to an oval. Any diy sites hiding?