x-no-archive:yes
I was talking to you guys the other day about how to do that and my
problem was my fence is one piece. Was thinking, can I create a sub
fence, making the outfeel level with the blad and under the infeed side
of the fence making a shim out of aluminm trim covering under it.
Wouldnt that makt it stick out the required 1/32 inch? Just a thought.
Sure. That's what I do, with a piece of veneer instead of aluminum
trim behind the subface. I'm a little unclear on your post, though -
you want the extra piece of trim behind the OUTFEED side of the fence
(i.e. the left side when you look at your router table). Google router
table jointer, and look in the archives here. Get a good straight bit
or a spiral upcut bit. Practice until it works, or until you realize
how you need to modify it to get it to work.
Also, according to my experience, plan on this bed project taking at
LEAST 4 times as long as you think it should.
Andy
I'm afraid I have to agree with "No" that many people are probably
already ignoring you (or kill-filing your messages) because you ask so
many basic questions without apparently doing much research or looking
in the archives first.
Thought I'd offer another general resource that might be helpful - go
to highlandhardware.com and look in their "Library" section - they have
a large variety of articles I've found helpful.
Good luck,
Andy
x-no-archive:yes
So, standing at the table, the left side should be shimmed 1/32 past
the blade, and the right side should be level with the blade, right? I
tried it with a piiece of shim before but the wood kept getting caught
on the shim and it did not produce a good finish at all.
Andy wrote:
> Sure. That's what I do, with a piece of veneer instead of aluminum
> trim behind the subface. I'm a little unclear on your post, though -
> you want the extra piece of trim behind the OUTFEED side of the fence
> (i.e. the left side when you look at your router table). Google router
> table jointer, and look in the archives here. Get a good straight bit
> or a spiral upcut bit. Practice until it works, or until you realize
> how you need to modify it to get it to work.
> Also, according to my experience, plan on this bed project taking at
> LEAST 4 times as long as you think it should.
> Andy
x-no-archive:yes
Thanks for the help! I really am trying to learn. But I am confused.
Earlier in this thred someone told me to place the shim on the "left"
side of the fence. (Which I assume is the outfeed side.)
So you are saying the shim which allows the right side of the fence to
stick out should be on the right or infeed side?
Rich wrote:
> No the left side should be even with the blade. If you put a straight edge
> on the outfeed side it should just "kiss" the blade. On the infeed side is
> where the 1/32" gap should be.
> Unfortunately there is no where for really new wood workers to go to. Many
> of the "experts" here get annoyed by beginner questions. Don't worry you
> have to start somewhere. Keep asking.
>
> "stryped" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > x-no-archive:yes
> >
> > So, standing at the table, the left side should be shimmed 1/32 past
> > the blade, and the right side should be level with the blade, right? I
> > tried it with a piiece of shim before but the wood kept getting caught
> > on the shim and it did not produce a good finish at all.
> > Andy wrote:
> >> Sure. That's what I do, with a piece of veneer instead of aluminum
> >> trim behind the subface. I'm a little unclear on your post, though -
> >> you want the extra piece of trim behind the OUTFEED side of the fence
> >> (i.e. the left side when you look at your router table). Google router
> >> table jointer, and look in the archives here. Get a good straight bit
> >> or a spiral upcut bit. Practice until it works, or until you realize
> >> how you need to modify it to get it to work.
> >> Also, according to my experience, plan on this bed project taking at
> >> LEAST 4 times as long as you think it should.
> >> Andy
> >
Fri, Feb 17, 2006, 10:59am (EST-3) [email protected] (stryped) doth
mumble:
x-no-archive:yes
I was talking to you guys the other day <snip> Just a thought.
Instead of you asking about every single thing that crosses your
mind, how about you going to the archives, and doing a bit of looking
for what ever confuses you? Most, if not all, of it has been beaten to
death, several times. That'll save a lot of questions, and you will
start to learn how to get answers on your own. Just a thought.
http://groups.google.com/advanced_group_search?as_ugroup=rec.woodworking&lr=&num=30
SAVE THE LINK>
JOAT
IThere is no vaccine against stupidity!
"stryped" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> x-no-archive:yes
>
> I was talking to you guys the other day about how to do that and my
> problem was my fence is one piece. Was thinking, can I create a sub
> fence, making the outfeel level with the blad and under the infeed side
> of the fence making a shim out of aluminm trim covering under it.
> Wouldnt that makt it stick out the required 1/32 inch? Just a thought.
>
A bit of advice - I think you are starting to get some people ticked off
with all your posts. You have asked for a lot of advice about a lot of
different things. Its obvious you have not taken any of the advice and tried
anything. Take a few steps back - Make a decision. Make some sawdust. Report
back what your decision was whose advice you followed. Thank them for the
advice. Move on and try your next step. Make some mistakes. You will learn
from your mistakes. Move on with your project(s), take some pictures. Come
back here for advice when you really have an impasse. This group is not just
about you. We all have varying levels of skills, experience and time to
devote reading and posting here. By getting people frustrated with noise
they will be less inclined to help others in the future and the quality of
this group will decline. I know some HAVE abandoned this group who were
superior woodworkers due to the junk, whining, span, flames and what not.
To answer your question above.
Yes. Nuf said.
No the left side should be even with the blade. If you put a straight edge
on the outfeed side it should just "kiss" the blade. On the infeed side is
where the 1/32" gap should be.
Unfortunately there is no where for really new wood workers to go to. Many
of the "experts" here get annoyed by beginner questions. Don't worry you
have to start somewhere. Keep asking.
"stryped" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> x-no-archive:yes
>
> So, standing at the table, the left side should be shimmed 1/32 past
> the blade, and the right side should be level with the blade, right? I
> tried it with a piiece of shim before but the wood kept getting caught
> on the shim and it did not produce a good finish at all.
> Andy wrote:
>> Sure. That's what I do, with a piece of veneer instead of aluminum
>> trim behind the subface. I'm a little unclear on your post, though -
>> you want the extra piece of trim behind the OUTFEED side of the fence
>> (i.e. the left side when you look at your router table). Google router
>> table jointer, and look in the archives here. Get a good straight bit
>> or a spiral upcut bit. Practice until it works, or until you realize
>> how you need to modify it to get it to work.
>> Also, according to my experience, plan on this bed project taking at
>> LEAST 4 times as long as you think it should.
>> Andy
>
What is "x-no-archive:yes" ?? And why do you do it??
--
Stoutman
http://www.garagewoodworks.com/index.htm
(Featuring a NEW look)
"stryped" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> >
> I was talking to you guys the other day about how to do that and my
> problem was my fence is one piece. Was thinking, can I create a sub
> fence, making the outfeel level with the blad and under the infeed side
> of the fence making a shim out of aluminm trim covering under it.
> Wouldnt that makt it stick out the required 1/32 inch? Just a thought.
>
On 17 Feb 2006 12:38:19 -0800, stryped wrote:
> x-no-archive:yes
>
> Thanks for the help! I really am trying to learn. But I am confused.
> Earlier in this thred someone told me to place the shim on the "left"
> side of the fence. (Which I assume is the outfeed side.)
>
> So you are saying the shim which allows the right side of the fence to
> stick out should be on the right or infeed side?
No. The shim goes on the outfeed side. The outfeed side is set so its even
with the cutter. The infeed side will then be BEHIND the cutter by an amount
equal to the thickness of the shim you put on the outfeed side. This is also
the maximum thickness of material that will be removed by the cutter.
--
Art
RB Jones wrote:
> This is a woodworking news group, or do you feel that all the
> questions have already been answered?
Not likely but the OP's have. Time after time after time after time...
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
stryped wrote:
> x-no-archive:yes
>
> I was talking to you guys the other day about how to do that and my
> problem was my fence is one piece. Was thinking, can I create a sub
> fence, making the outfeel level with the blad and under the infeed
> side of the fence making a shim out of aluminm trim covering under it.
> Wouldnt that makt it stick out the required 1/32 inch? Just a thought.
Do you ever bother to read what people tell you or do you just like to
post? You were already told how to fix your one piece fence.
1/32 not required, thought is.
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
That is so his posts will not archive. Once they drop off here, they are
gone.
"stoutman" <.@.> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> What is "x-no-archive:yes" ?? And why do you do it??
>
>
> --
> Stoutman
> http://www.garagewoodworks.com/index.htm
> (Featuring a NEW look)
> "stryped" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > >
> > I was talking to you guys the other day about how to do that and my
> > problem was my fence is one piece. Was thinking, can I create a sub
> > fence, making the outfeel level with the blad and under the infeed side
> > of the fence making a shim out of aluminm trim covering under it.
> > Wouldnt that makt it stick out the required 1/32 inch? Just a thought.
> >
>
>
"stoutman" <.@.> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> What is "x-no-archive:yes" ?? And why do you do it??
>
He never answers that.
stoutman wrote:
> What is "x-no-archive:yes" ??
It's to prevent the message from being archived.
> And why do you do it??
To keep current denseness from biting him in the ass in the future?
--
dadiOH
____________________________
dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
...a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico
On Sat, 18 Feb 2006 15:02:41 GMT, "dadiOH" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>> And why do you do it??
>
>To keep current denseness from biting him in the ass in the future?
Since he's posting from Google, with a throwaway email address, I
doubt the future is a worry.
The "no archive" flag could also keep his repetitive trolling
questions from biting him in the ass NOW. <G> If you ask the same
thing, slightly reworded, three days in a row, you don't want others
to point you back at it.
I suspect that most of these trolls are actually experienced
woodworkers and possibly even someone who "left" the group with his
panties in a wad. The questions often touch on topics that newbies
ask all the time, but the troll will keep adding innane details to
drag it on.
I've seen similar trolls on groups covering all kinds of subjects. One
that I actually liked used to occasionally ask how to keep his beer
cold and where to hide his weed while flying large scale model
airplanes on a radio control forum.
Want to see a group that's REALLY been destroyed with politics? Check
out rec.autos.toyota. Serious name calling can be found on any radio
group, and especially alt.radio.satellite
Well JOAT I see your manners haven't improved in the 10 years or so you have
been hanging out here. Someone actually asks a woodworking related question
and you berate him. His questions sure beat the hell out of your posting war
with some crazy about war, dead soldiers, buttercups and gays.
This is a woodworking news group, or do you feel that all the questions have
already been answered?
Bob
"J T" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Fri, Feb 17, 2006, 10:59am (EST-3) [email protected] (stryped) doth
> mumble:
> x-no-archive:yes
> I was talking to you guys the other day <snip> Just a thought.
>
> Instead of you asking about every single thing that crosses your
> mind, how about you going to the archives, and doing a bit of looking
> for what ever confuses you? Most, if not all, of it has been beaten to
> death, several times. That'll save a lot of questions, and you will
> start to learn how to get answers on your own. Just a thought.
> http://groups.google.com/advanced_group_search?as_ugroup=rec.woodworking&lr=&num=30
> SAVE THE LINK>
>
>
>
> JOAT
> IThere is no vaccine against stupidity!
>