Lobby Dosser wrote:
> They're talking about a sheet of rubber-like material with holes in it.
> If you search in the router section of some suppliers, they sell
> something similar for keeping flat stock from skittering around while
> you rout it. Advantage being no clamps. Glue some of this to a push
> stick and you now have a push stick which will not slip. The shelf liner
> version is much thinner and cheaper than that sold for routing.
And the one sold for routing doesn't work all that well.
--
It's turtles, all the way down
ROY! wrote:
> Speaking of shelf liner, does anyone have a source for thin rolled
> cork. I think this rubber shelf lining is a royal pain in my cabinets.
I just bought a good sized roll of 1/8" cork at Meijers (chain grocers)
in their school & arts supplies aisle.
Bill
--
http://nmwoodworks.com/cube
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ROY! wrote:
> On Tue, 03 Apr 2007 02:53:16 -0400, Bill in Detroit <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>> ROY! wrote:
>>
>>> Speaking of shelf liner, does anyone have a source for thin rolled
>>> cork. I think this rubber shelf lining is a royal pain in my cabinets.
>> I just bought a good sized roll of 1/8" cork at Meijers (chain grocers)
>> in their school & arts supplies aisle.
>>
>> Bill
> Hey Bill, do they have any stores in New Jersey?
>
>
Dunno ... DAGS and see.
Or else just drive around New Jersey for a while ;-)
This link might work for you ... I used "cork sheet" as the search term.
http://www.flex-a-chart.com/tan_cork.htm
It looks like the Meijer site (http://www.meijer.com/) is rejecting
Firefox ... I can't imagine it throwing a 404 error when I click on
"Products" ... but it does. So I clicked on another link and got the
same response. I have Opera, Netscape and MSIE here, but darned if I'm
going to fire them up so I can spend money with someone. If they want me
to respond to their website, their website will have to respond to my
browser.
Bill
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On Sun, 01 Apr 2007 08:35:54 -0700, Larry Blanchard
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>And the one sold for routing doesn't work all that well.
It hasn't for me, either. 8^(
I quickly went back to using clamps or carpet tape to hold the work to
the bench.
Phil Hansen <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Sun, 01 Apr 2007 06:07:51 GMT, Lobby Dosser
>>They're talking about a sheet of rubber-like material with holes in
>>it. If you search in the router section of some suppliers, they sell
>>something similar for keeping flat stock from skittering around while
>>you rout it. Advantage being no clamps. Glue some of this to a push
>>stick and you now have a push stick which will not slip. The shelf
>>liner version is much thinner and cheaper than that sold for routing.
> Thanks now I know what they are talking about. Here you can by it at
> auto shops as a boot/trunk mat to stop things sliding around.
You're welcome.
Phil Hansen <[email protected]> wrote:
> Just got my Feb FWW. One tip mentions a shelf liner on a push stick.
> The 3rd world has never heard of a shelf liner. Please give me an idea
> of what it made of so can get something similar.
> TIA
>
> ******
>
> eat the samoosa to reply
>
Ahh! The push stick had me bamboozled for a bit. Sounded like a hot dog
on a stick or summat.
They're talking about a sheet of rubber-like material with holes in it.
If you search in the router section of some suppliers, they sell
something similar for keeping flat stock from skittering around while
you rout it. Advantage being no clamps. Glue some of this to a push
stick and you now have a push stick which will not slip. The shelf liner
version is much thinner and cheaper than that sold for routing.
Larry Blanchard <[email protected]> wrote:
> Lobby Dosser wrote:
>
>> They're talking about a sheet of rubber-like material with holes in
>> it. If you search in the router section of some suppliers, they sell
>> something similar for keeping flat stock from skittering around while
>> you rout it. Advantage being no clamps. Glue some of this to a push
>> stick and you now have a push stick which will not slip. The shelf
>> liner version is much thinner and cheaper than that sold for routing.
>
> And the one sold for routing doesn't work all that well.
>
Ain't that the truth! Good idea though.
On Sun, 01 Apr 2007 06:37:39 +0200, Phil Hansen
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Just got my Feb FWW. One tip mentions a shelf liner on a push stick.
>The 3rd world has never heard of a shelf liner. Please give me an idea
>of what it made of so can get something similar.
>TIA
>
>******
>
>eat the samoosa to reply
This rubber "woven" material is commonly sold in numerous stores. I
have used one to hold small pieces while routing. Also used under
rugs to keep them from slipping. I've seen varying qualities of this
material. Comes in many colors. Be careful--because rubber contains
sulphur it can react with many materials and permanently "stain" them.
Slick for lining bathroom drawers with slidy bottom. Bit of sprat
adhesive in the corners and items stay pretty well in place instead of
sliding to the back.
On Sun, 01 Apr 2007 06:07:51 GMT, Lobby Dosser
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Phil Hansen <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Just got my Feb FWW. One tip mentions a shelf liner on a push stick.
>> The 3rd world has never heard of a shelf liner. Please give me an idea
>> of what it made of so can get something similar.
>> TIA
>>
>> ******
>>
>> eat the samoosa to reply
>>
>
>Ahh! The push stick had me bamboozled for a bit. Sounded like a hot dog
>on a stick or summat.
>
>They're talking about a sheet of rubber-like material with holes in it.
>If you search in the router section of some suppliers, they sell
>something similar for keeping flat stock from skittering around while
>you rout it. Advantage being no clamps. Glue some of this to a push
>stick and you now have a push stick which will not slip. The shelf liner
>version is much thinner and cheaper than that sold for routing.
On Sun, 01 Apr 2007 11:57:30 -0400, B A R R Y <[email protected]>
wrote:
>On Sun, 01 Apr 2007 08:35:54 -0700, Larry Blanchard
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>>And the one sold for routing doesn't work all that well.
>
>It hasn't for me, either. 8^(
>
>I quickly went back to using clamps or carpet tape to hold the work to
>the bench.
Shelf liners work most of the time for me IF I double it up and
periodically rinse and hang them to dry.
Speaking of shelf liner, does anyone have a source for thin rolled
cork. I think this rubber shelf lining is a royal pain in my cabinets.
On Tue, 03 Apr 2007 02:53:16 -0400, Bill in Detroit <[email protected]>
wrote:
>ROY! wrote:
>
>> Speaking of shelf liner, does anyone have a source for thin rolled
>> cork. I think this rubber shelf lining is a royal pain in my cabinets.
>
>I just bought a good sized roll of 1/8" cork at Meijers (chain grocers)
>in their school & arts supplies aisle.
>
>Bill
Hey Bill, do they have any stores in New Jersey?
On Sun, 01 Apr 2007 06:07:51 GMT, Lobby Dosser
>They're talking about a sheet of rubber-like material with holes in it.
>If you search in the router section of some suppliers, they sell
>something similar for keeping flat stock from skittering around while
>you rout it. Advantage being no clamps. Glue some of this to a push
>stick and you now have a push stick which will not slip. The shelf liner
>version is much thinner and cheaper than that sold for routing.
Thanks now I know what they are talking about. Here you can by it at
auto shops as a boot/trunk mat to stop things sliding around.
******
eat the samoosa to reply