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28/07/2003 10:54 AM

Joinery question

Let me preface this post by saying I am a woodworking newbie without
the best tools available.

Anyway, I am trying to make my wife a nightstand. I got the top,
sides, back, shelves, and face frames cut and assembled, and wonder of
wonders they are all SQUARE!

I started to assemble everything this weekend and wouldn't you know
it, the top of the nightstand is about 1/16" wider than the sides. I
didn't see this when I dry fitted everything only after I glued it.

My question is this, is there an idiot-proof way to shave the extra
off of my top so that my face frame fits flush all the way around?

Thanks in advance for helping a newbie...


This topic has 4 replies

PP

"Pat Payne"

in reply to [email protected] on 28/07/2003 10:54 AM

28/07/2003 11:38 AM

use a flush trim bit on a router.

MG

"Mike G"

in reply to [email protected] on 28/07/2003 10:54 AM

28/07/2003 5:58 PM

Your description is a bit vague and confusing. Will the face frame not fit
flush because the top extends past the front of the chest or is the top
ending up giving you wings on either side of the chest?


Router, straight bit, bushing guide and a straight edge for a guide or stand
it up on it's top on the table saw, if it is square, you should be able to
shave it off by running the back along the rip fence. Either of those two
methods will fix the first scenario. .

A flush trim bit would fix the second as would, again, if all is square,
running it through the table saw.
--
Mike G.
Heirloom Woods
www.heirloom-woods.net
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Let me preface this post by saying I am a woodworking newbie without
> the best tools available.
>
> Anyway, I am trying to make my wife a nightstand. I got the top,
> sides, back, shelves, and face frames cut and assembled, and wonder of
> wonders they are all SQUARE!
>
> I started to assemble everything this weekend and wouldn't you know
> it, the top of the nightstand is about 1/16" wider than the sides. I
> didn't see this when I dry fitted everything only after I glued it.
>
> My question is this, is there an idiot-proof way to shave the extra
> off of my top so that my face frame fits flush all the way around?
>
> Thanks in advance for helping a newbie...

TW

Traves W. Coppock

in reply to [email protected] on 28/07/2003 10:54 AM

28/07/2003 4:03 PM

On 28 Jul 2003 10:54:13 -0700, [email protected] Crawled out of the
shop and said. . .:

>Let me preface this post by saying I am a woodworking newbie without
>the best tools available.
>
>Anyway, I am trying to make my wife a nightstand. I got the top,
>sides, back, shelves, and face frames cut and assembled, and wonder of
>wonders they are all SQUARE!
>

As bob stated, squareness endeth newbieness

>I started to assemble everything this weekend and wouldn't you know
>it, the top of the nightstand is about 1/16" wider than the sides. I
>didn't see this when I dry fitted everything only after I glued it.
>

here is where Bob and i differ...lol
welcome to "artistic design 101"

>My question is this, is there an idiot-proof way to shave the extra
>off of my top so that my face frame fits flush all the way around?
>

think about leaving it, and call it what David Marks calls it.
its a 1/32" "reveal"
hehe, in all seriousness,,it might actualy be easier to incorporate
your "mistake" into the asthetics of the piece.

personaly i dont recall very many of the projects i have done recently
that have gone from paper to use without some kind of "process
modification" or cover the screwups.

>Thanks in advance for helping a newbie...

jewbeddybelcome

Traves

Sw

"Steve"

in reply to [email protected] on 28/07/2003 10:54 AM

28/07/2003 6:40 PM


"Pat Payne" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:H4eVa.3869$Ye.823@fed1read02...
> use a flush trim bit on a router.
>

And climb cut the end to avoid tearout/splintering.


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