JJ

JGS

07/01/2006 7:01 AM

Q?- What advantage does Freud99-281 R&S Glass bits provide

I see that Freud has series of rail and stile router bits meant for
glass cabinet doors. It appears to me that the one advantage is that you
can reapply the inside strip once the glass is installed. Am I missing
something?
If you plan on using glue to reattach the piece, I guess this means
that you cannot prefinish the door before adding the glass. OR am I
missing something else?
And what would the ends of the doors look like? Is there a gap?
Thanks, JG

http://www.freud-tools.com/freudrecbead.html


This topic has 3 replies

mh

"mike hide"

in reply to JGS on 07/01/2006 7:01 AM

07/01/2006 3:26 PM


"JGS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I see that Freud has series of rail and stile router bits meant for
> glass cabinet doors. It appears to me that the one advantage is that you
> can reapply the inside strip once the glass is installed. Am I missing
> something?
> If you plan on using glue to reattach the piece, I guess this means
> that you cannot prefinish the door before adding the glass. OR am I
> missing something else?
> And what would the ends of the doors look like? Is there a gap?
> Thanks, JG
>
> http://www.freud-tools.com/freudrecbead.all



I do my doors with a standard grizzley stile and rail
set on the shaper . I use the same set for interior raised panel doors . The
glazing is held in place by simple wooden stops, so the stops and the doors
can be finished separately the glass installed and the assembly made . If
your address is good I will email you some shots .....mjh

JJ

JGS

in reply to JGS on 07/01/2006 7:01 AM

08/01/2006 5:33 AM

Sorry about that Mike. Please remove the " Stamp" from my address and resend.
Thanks, JG

mike hide wrote:

> "mike hide" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >
> > "JGS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >>I see that Freud has series of rail and stile router bits meant for
> >> glass cabinet doors. It appears to me that the one advantage is that you
> >> can reapply the inside strip once the glass is installed. Am I missing
> >> something?
> >> If you plan on using glue to reattach the piece, I guess this means
> >> that you cannot prefinish the door before adding the glass. OR am I
> >> missing something else?
> >> And what would the ends of the doors look like? Is there a gap?
> >> Thanks, JG
> >>
> >> http://www.freud-tools.com/freudrecbead.all
> >
> >
> >
> > I do my doors with a standard grizzley stile and
> > rail set on the shaper . I use the same set for interior raised panel
> > doors . The glazing is held in place by simple wooden stops, so the stops
> > and the doors can be finished separately the glass installed and the
> > assembly made . If your address is good I will email you some shots
> > .....mjh
> >
> >as usual the email address is false, so why bother responding...mjh

mh

"mike hide"

in reply to JGS on 07/01/2006 7:01 AM

07/01/2006 6:38 PM


"mike hide" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "JGS" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>>I see that Freud has series of rail and stile router bits meant for
>> glass cabinet doors. It appears to me that the one advantage is that you
>> can reapply the inside strip once the glass is installed. Am I missing
>> something?
>> If you plan on using glue to reattach the piece, I guess this means
>> that you cannot prefinish the door before adding the glass. OR am I
>> missing something else?
>> And what would the ends of the doors look like? Is there a gap?
>> Thanks, JG
>>
>> http://www.freud-tools.com/freudrecbead.all
>
>
>
> I do my doors with a standard grizzley stile and
> rail set on the shaper . I use the same set for interior raised panel
> doors . The glazing is held in place by simple wooden stops, so the stops
> and the doors can be finished separately the glass installed and the
> assembly made . If your address is good I will email you some shots
> .....mjh
>
>as usual the email address is false, so why bother responding...mjh


You’ve reached the end of replies