In article <[email protected]>,
stryped <[email protected]> wrote:
> I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
> rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
> plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
> make sense?
You just don't learn, do you?
In article <[email protected]>, Robatoy
<[email protected]> wrote:
> If he assembles it with those half-length nails, the planer blades will
> not hit them, right?
Dunno. Did he get that answer when he spawned the thread about the same
question two montha ago?
Jeez... I need a break. I'm off to ZomboCom.
http://www.zombo.com
See ya there...
x-no-archive:yes
I am sorry I meant cutting board. What is the difference between edge
grain and end grain styles though?
So I should wait to cut into strips until it has been planed on both
sides?
Chris Friesen wrote:
> stryped wrote:
> > x-no-archive:yes
> >
> > I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
> > rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
> > plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
> > make sense?
>
> I assume you mean an edge-grain cutting board rather than a true
> end-grain butcher block?
>
> You need to get one straight/flat face first. I think all you've got is
> a planer, so either use hand tools or else build a sled for the planer.
>
> Then plane the other side.
>
> Rip it into strips, then rotate all the pieces so that the planed edges
> line up, and glue it.
>
> Flatten/plane again.
stryped wrote:
> x-no-archive:yes
>
> I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
> rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
> plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
> make sense?
I assume you mean an edge-grain cutting board rather than a true
end-grain butcher block?
You need to get one straight/flat face first. I think all you've got is
a planer, so either use hand tools or else build a sled for the planer.
Then plane the other side.
Rip it into strips, then rotate all the pieces so that the planed edges
line up, and glue it.
Flatten/plane again.
stryped wrote:
> x-no-archive:yes
>
> I am sorry I meant cutting board. What is the difference between edge
> grain and end grain styles though?
Try looking it up on google...there's all sorts of examples.
> So I should wait to cut into strips until it has been planed on both
> sides?
Up to you--but why would you want to run many strips through the planer
when you can just do one board before ripping it?
Chris
On Tue, 11 Apr 2006 19:41:49 -0600, Dave Balderstone
<dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca> wrote:
>In article <[email protected]>,
>stryped <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
>> rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
>> plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
>> make sense?
>
>You just don't learn, do you?
LOL! Look who's talking. Dave I have tree stumps in my yard smarter than you.
stryped wrote:
> x-no-archive:yes
>
> I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
> rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
> plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
> make sense?
Nope. Not unless you glue them together then cut into pieces the width
you want the butcher block then glue them together again...butcher
blocks are end grain.
--
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
In article <110420061941494219%dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca>,
Dave Balderstone <dave@N_O_T_T_H_I_Sbalderstone.ca> wrote:
> In article <[email protected]>,
> stryped <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
> > rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
> > plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
> > make sense?
>
> You just don't learn, do you?
If he assembles it with those half-length nails, the planer blades will
not hit them, right?
stryped <[email protected]> wrote:
: x-no-archive:yes
: I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
: rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
: plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther?
Yes!
Does that
: make sense?
No!
-- Andy Barss
stryped wrote:
>
> I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
> rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
> plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
> make sense?
>
Why not just cut the crap and stop asking the same question over and
over again?
When someone replies to you and quotes you, your dumbass TROLLS still
get archived, regardless of your no-archive flag:
<http://groups.google.com/group/rec.woodworking/browse_thread/thread/13d92e271705ec44/8a77568b6e224a82?lnk=st&q=edge+joint+stryped&rnum=3#8a77568b6e224a82>
If it the url wrapped, simply google "edge joint stryped"
On 4/11/2006 9:41 PM Dave Balderstone mumbled something about the following:
> In article <[email protected]>,
> stryped <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I want to make a butcher blok out of hard maple. I have a hard maple
>> rough cut one inch board. Can I cut it into one inch wide strips and
>> plane all edges so it is down to 3/4 then glue them togther? Does that
>> make sense?
>
> You just don't learn, do you?
Neither do the fools that keep answering his questions.
--
Odinn
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