Greetings,
Am whittling up a veneer hammer. Have 3/32" brass for the blade. Googling
shows a variety of blade materials used as blades. Anyone here tried
plexi, uhmw, or boxwood? Seems metal is the right material, but just
checking.
While wrapping a bleeding finger, I wondered if surgical tape resembles
veneer tape? (1, haven't purchased the real veneer tape yet , and 2, I
kept a close eye on the blade and slowed down as I finished the cut
because I just _knew_ it would jump at my finger. It did. damn)
--
"Keep your ass behind you"
vladimir a t mad {dot} scientist {dot} com
In article <[email protected]>,
Juergen Hannappel <[email protected]> wrote:
> Since you use the hammer to heat up the glue you want as large a heat
> capacity and headt conductibility in it's material as you can
> reasonably get, therefore metal is the way to go.
Now I'm confused. I see a thicker blade is in order. Are we putting heat
into the glue, or taking it out? Trying for equilibrium?
The 0.93 strip was the thickest the local hardware store carried. It's a
foot long, so I'll sandwich the blade between two layers of brass; maybe
solder them together. Rivet them in with 3/16 or 1/4 brass rod through
undersized holes.
Or just get out the crowbar and turn this thing into a marking gauge...
Thanks for the replies.
--
"Keep your ass behind you."
On Fri, 07 Oct 2005 20:28:22 -0500, Australopithecus scobis
<[email protected]> wrote:
> Am whittling up a veneer hammer. Have 3/32" brass for the blade.
That'll work. But after I had one like that, I ended up with around
3/16" brass for my next one.
>Anyone here tried plexi, uhmw, or boxwood?
Perspex (plexi) works, but you don't get the same heatsinking effect
that you do with brass.
Australopithecus scobis <[email protected]> writes:
> Greetings,
> Am whittling up a veneer hammer. Have 3/32" brass for the blade. Googling
> shows a variety of blade materials used as blades. Anyone here tried
> plexi, uhmw, or boxwood? Seems metal is the right material, but just
> checking.
Since you use the hammer to heat up the glue you want as large a heat
capacity and headt conductibility in it's material as you can
reasonably get, therefore metal is the way to go.
--
Dr. Juergen Hannappel http://lisa2.physik.uni-bonn.de/~hannappe
mailto:[email protected] Phone: +49 228 73 2447 FAX ... 7869
Physikalisches Institut der Uni Bonn Nussallee 12, D-53115 Bonn, Germany
CERN: Phone: +412276 76461 Fax: ..77930 Bat. 892-R-A13 CH-1211 Geneve 23