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"HandyGuy"

25/02/2005 8:49 PM

Roundover radius size?

I'm making some laminate kitchen countertops and need to know which
router bit roundover size to use. The bull-nose section of the
countertop needs to be a full wrap-around style (a near perfect half
circle. I'll be making these coutertops from standard 3/4 particle
board. I'm not sure which router bit I need to buy, I've tried the
1/2" radius roundover bit but it was too small. Should I get the 3/4"
radius roundover bit or a 1"?

Like this pic
http://prestigekitchens.com/images/Countertops/Countertop%20Profile5.jpg

Thx


This topic has 4 replies

Tu

"TaskMule"

in reply to "HandyGuy" on 25/02/2005 8:49 PM

26/02/2005 12:04 AM


"HandyGuy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I'm making some laminate kitchen countertops and need to know which
> router bit roundover size to use. The bull-nose section of the
> countertop needs to be a full wrap-around style (a near perfect half
> circle. I'll be making these coutertops from standard 3/4 particle
> board. I'm not sure which router bit I need to buy, I've tried the
> 1/2" radius roundover bit but it was too small. Should I get the 3/4"
> radius roundover bit or a 1"?
>
> Like this pic
> http://prestigekitchens.com/images/Countertops/Countertop%20Profile5.jpg
>
> Thx
>

Well the picture shows a radius of 5/8, really not sure what to say from
here, you have all the information you need.

Rd

Robatoy

in reply to "HandyGuy" on 25/02/2005 8:49 PM

26/02/2005 12:16 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
"HandyGuy" <[email protected]> wrote:

> I'm making some laminate kitchen countertops and need to know which
> router bit roundover size to use. The bull-nose section of the
> countertop needs to be a full wrap-around style (a near perfect half
> circle. I'll be making these coutertops from standard 3/4 particle
> board. I'm not sure which router bit I need to buy, I've tried the
> 1/2" radius roundover bit but it was too small. Should I get the 3/4"
> radius roundover bit or a 1"?
>
> Like this pic
> http://prestigekitchens.com/images/Countertops/Countertop%20Profile5.jpg
>
> Thx
>

errmmm... are you stacking two layers of of 3/4 or 11/16?
Either way..are you going to heat the laminate or trying your luck with
postform grade?
Even with postform (thin) grade laminate, you are going to have rough
time doing that radius over any length.
I suggest you buy it already postformed. Won't be much more than buying
the laminate, particle board, contact adhesive, brushes/rollers, router
bit,...all that for a job that you really need a post-form machine for.

Most countertop places will lay up any laminate you want.
Between 10 and 12 dollars per lineal foot? 15 max?

What were your plans for the back splash?

I am not trying to discourage you....actually.. I am.

0¿0

Rob

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "HandyGuy" on 25/02/2005 8:49 PM

26/02/2005 10:36 AM

It was somewhere outside Barstow when "HandyGuy"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Should I get the 3/4"
>radius roundover bit or a 1"?

Few pieces of scrap timber, block plane, plane a few samples up by
hand and see what you like, then measure the radius.

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "HandyGuy" on 25/02/2005 8:49 PM

26/02/2005 6:59 AM

On 25 Feb 2005 20:49:00 -0800, the inscrutable "HandyGuy"
<[email protected]> spake:

>I'm making some laminate kitchen countertops and need to know which
>router bit roundover size to use. The bull-nose section of the
>countertop needs to be a full wrap-around style (a near perfect half
>circle. I'll be making these coutertops from standard 3/4 particle
>board. I'm not sure which router bit I need to buy, I've tried the
>1/2" radius roundover bit but it was too small. Should I get the 3/4"
>radius roundover bit or a 1"?

Bullnose thickness of 1-1/2" gives you a 3/4" radius for a smooth
curve. Be sure to set it up on scrap so you get the edge you want and
avoid ridges.


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