Aa

"AM"

16/01/2005 12:00 PM

Resawing with a bandsaw

Hello -
I'm looking for opinions, hopefully experienced ones, on resawing wood with
a bandsaw. I'm new to the bandsaw world so any / all opinions are welcome.
I've seen articles, books, and a video or two regarding techniques of
resawing. All techniques involve using a fence, however some use what looks
like a curved piece that attaches to the fence that the wood rests on as a
guide. Does resawing require that much manual direction control or can I
slap the wood against the fence, as on a tablesaw, and use a featherboard to
keep steady pressure on the wood. I am looking to resaw wood not much wider
than 4 - 6 inches wide for now.
Thanks!
Dave


This topic has 3 replies

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "AM" on 16/01/2005 12:00 PM

16/01/2005 2:10 PM

<[email protected]> wrote in message
> I prefer the lazy way of featherboard against the slab using a wide
> fence that tracks the lead angle of the current blade. I've not seen
> any advantage of the point reference "fence" when resawing.

Ditto ... along with blade choice, that has always been the key to
satisfactory band saw resawing for me.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04

NP

Nate Perkins

in reply to "AM" on 16/01/2005 12:00 PM

17/01/2005 10:35 PM

"AM" <[email protected]> wrote in news:1YxGd.18244$ph.12868@okepread01:

> Hello -
> I'm looking for opinions, hopefully experienced ones, on resawing wood
> with a bandsaw. I'm new to the bandsaw world so any / all opinions
> are welcome. I've seen articles, books, and a video or two regarding
> techniques of resawing. All techniques involve using a fence, however
> some use what looks like a curved piece that attaches to the fence
> that the wood rests on as a guide. Does resawing require that much
> manual direction control or can I slap the wood against the fence, as
> on a tablesaw, and use a featherboard to keep steady pressure on the
> wood. I am looking to resaw wood not much wider than 4 - 6 inches
> wide for now. Thanks!
> Dave

Either method works fine. A point contact fence can also be used. The
subtleties are really only important if you are resawing very thin slices;
e.g., veneers.

I do veneers at 1/16" with a tall straight fence about 5" wide. The
important factors are the tuning of the saw (tracking of the blade,
alignment of the thrust bearing and blade side supports) and the reasonable
quality of the blade.

nn

in reply to "AM" on 16/01/2005 12:00 PM

16/01/2005 11:43 AM

I prefer the lazy way of featherboard against the slab using a wide
fence that tracks the lead angle of the current blade. I've not seen
any advantage of the point reference "fence" when resawing.

On Sun, 16 Jan 2005 12:00:31 -0600, "AM" <[email protected]> wrote:

>Hello -
>I'm looking for opinions, hopefully experienced ones, on resawing wood with
>a bandsaw. I'm new to the bandsaw world so any / all opinions are welcome.
>I've seen articles, books, and a video or two regarding techniques of
>resawing. All techniques involve using a fence, however some use what looks
>like a curved piece that attaches to the fence that the wood rests on as a
>guide. Does resawing require that much manual direction control or can I
>slap the wood against the fence, as on a tablesaw, and use a featherboard to
>keep steady pressure on the wood. I am looking to resaw wood not much wider
>than 4 - 6 inches wide for now.
>Thanks!
>Dave
>


You’ve reached the end of replies