x-no-archive-yes
I am almost done making a knife drawer with removable cutting board for
my mother. THis is my first woodworking project. The false drawer front
is small, maybe 2 1/2 inches wide by 12 inches long and is 1/2 inch
thick. My moms kitchen drawers have that ?raised pannel look. It shows
in my book how to tilt the blade to 15 degrees and raise the blade to a
certain height depending on the thickness of wood you are using but my
wood being only 1/2 inch thick, it is difficult for me to figure out.
Can anyone help me or would it look stupid to raise this small a piece
of wood?
Also, I have the stain my mom's cabinets are. However, her wood is
cherry and I used red oak. Will it look that much different? (It does
not matter, just curious).
Thanks again!
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How can I use a router? I only have a small one and no raised panel
bits. (My router will not take 1/2 inch shanks).
Perfection In Wood wrote:
> On 18 Jun 2006 15:51:17 -0700, "stryped" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >x-no-archive-yes
> >I am almost done making a knife drawer with removable cutting board for
> >my mother. THis is my first woodworking project. The false drawer front
> >is small, maybe 2 1/2 inches wide by 12 inches long and is 1/2 inch
> >thick. My moms kitchen drawers have that ?raised pannel look. It shows
> >in my book how to tilt the blade to 15 degrees and raise the blade to a
> >certain height depending on the thickness of wood you are using but my
> >wood being only 1/2 inch thick, it is difficult for me to figure out.
> >Can anyone help me or would it look stupid to raise this small a piece
> >of wood?
> >
> >Also, I have the stain my mom's cabinets are. However, her wood is
> >cherry and I used red oak. Will it look that much different? (It does
> >not matter, just curious).
> >
> >Thanks again!
>
>
> Sounds like you plan to use a table saw to make these panels and that
> presents some problems in itself.
> To cut a clean panel on a T/S you'll need a very sharp blade to start
> - esp using oak.
> Second, I don't think you can start with 1/2" stock. The lower end of
> the panel (around the outside edge) should not be less than 3/8" IMO.
> Start with 1" stock if possible.
> Based on the size of your drawer front a rasied panel will have to be
> very modest. Most raised panel cuts are at least an 1 1/4" in width.
> based on your 2 1/2" size this would not leave any "rasied area".
>
> Anyway, I would suggest you get away from the T/S due to the small
> size of the panel and consider using a router. While I feel the use of
> a router for large RP work is not good, a router can make some smaller
> raised panels quite well.
>
> I also believe the oak will "stand out" from the cherry no matter how
> you finish it.
>
> J
On 18 Jun 2006 15:51:17 -0700, "stryped" <[email protected]> wrote:
>x-no-archive-yes
>I am almost done making a knife drawer with removable cutting board for
>my mother. THis is my first woodworking project. The false drawer front
>is small, maybe 2 1/2 inches wide by 12 inches long and is 1/2 inch
>thick. My moms kitchen drawers have that ?raised pannel look. It shows
>in my book how to tilt the blade to 15 degrees and raise the blade to a
>certain height depending on the thickness of wood you are using but my
>wood being only 1/2 inch thick, it is difficult for me to figure out.
>Can anyone help me or would it look stupid to raise this small a piece
>of wood?
>
>Also, I have the stain my mom's cabinets are. However, her wood is
>cherry and I used red oak. Will it look that much different? (It does
>not matter, just curious).
>
>Thanks again!
Sounds like you plan to use a table saw to make these panels and that
presents some problems in itself.
To cut a clean panel on a T/S you'll need a very sharp blade to start
- esp using oak.
Second, I don't think you can start with 1/2" stock. The lower end of
the panel (around the outside edge) should not be less than 3/8" IMO.
Start with 1" stock if possible.
Based on the size of your drawer front a rasied panel will have to be
very modest. Most raised panel cuts are at least an 1 1/4" in width.
based on your 2 1/2" size this would not leave any "rasied area".
Anyway, I would suggest you get away from the T/S due to the small
size of the panel and consider using a router. While I feel the use of
a router for large RP work is not good, a router can make some smaller
raised panels quite well.
I also believe the oak will "stand out" from the cherry no matter how
you finish it.
J
On 19 Jun 2006 05:09:19 -0700, "stryped" <[email protected]> wrote:
>x-no-archive:yes
>
>How can I use a router? I only have a small one and no raised panel
>bits. (My router will not take 1/2 inch shanks).
Make a little sled for the router to ride on at the angle you want,
and set in over the drawer front. Then you can use a regular straight
bit.
I'll try and explain this a little better, but it's hard without
pictures- cut two square blocks, then trim the top off at an angle to
get the bevel you want. Cut two long strips of something stiff, and
nail or glue them to the angled cut on the first two blocks with a gap
between them for the bit to ride in. Secure the jig somehow (clamps
or screws) and slide your drawerfront underneith. Clamp the
drawerfront down, and rout with the base of the tool riding on those
long strips.