MM

"Mary Mlinar-Stephens"

24/03/2006 1:34 PM

Laminating A MDF Tool Stand

Hi to all in the group

I am currently building a tool stand from a plan published in American
Woodworker from 2000.

I am at the point of deciding to use plastic laminate on all the top
sections of the tool stand which is made of 3/4 MDF. The design calls for
making slots in the top for a way to slide clamps into for holding wood you
are working on.

Here is my problem :

I have only a circular saw and a small Craftsman bench saw. I would normally
use a small router with a flush trimming bit to get an accurate nice edge to
the laminated top for the slots.

Would it be possible to buy a cheap laminate cutting blade for my circular
saw using a fence to cut the slots or would I be better off just using some
kind of laminate cutting scoring blade to do this?

I saw one version of the tool stand where a guy used laminate flooring
instead of plastic laminate sheet which I assume I can cut to size and do
the slots on the table saw just shifting the fence in small increments to
make the slots ( I have no dado blade).

As you can guess from this post I have very little in the way of power tools
at present as I am just starting out after moving from the UK and giving all
my tools away to family and friends.

Here is a link to the plan in case your puzzled about my question
http://christophermerrill.net/ww/plans/UTS/Tool_Stand_1.html

Thank you in advance for any suggestions the group can give

Tony Stephens


This topic has 2 replies

dn

"deadlock"

in reply to "Mary Mlinar-Stephens" on 24/03/2006 1:34 PM

24/03/2006 6:52 PM


"Guess who" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 13:34:53 GMT, "Mary Mlinar-Stephens"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Hi to all in the group
>>
>>I am currently building a tool stand from a plan published in American
>>Woodworker from 2000.
>>
>>I am at the point of deciding to use plastic laminate on all the top
>>sections of the tool stand which is made of 3/4 MDF. The design calls for
>>making slots in the top for a way to slide clamps into for holding wood
>>you
>>are working on.
>>
>>Here is my problem :
>>
>>I have only a circular saw and a small Craftsman bench saw. I would
>>normally
>>use a small router with a flush trimming bit to get an accurate nice edge
>>to
>>the laminated top for the slots.
>
> It looks like the parts are in separate pieces, the "grooves" being
> openings between them, so....
>
> One possibility: Using an accurate straight edge guide, use your
> router idea to *just* cut through the laminate; little stress, more
> accurate cut. Then finish the cut[s] using the table saw, or circular
> saw with a guide. You might even cut *just* inside the earlier router
> cuts then clean the edges with a sander.
>
> Either way, seal the ends against moisture when done.
>

Cut the lam around 3mm oversize, glue it down (use glue sticks to stop it
catching the adhesive before you're lined up!) and trim it with your block
plane set medium-fine. Take the arris off with 120 grit on a block.No block
plane? No problem. A second-cut file, parallel type with one non-safe edge
will do the job, running it flat against the board edge so the toothed edge
trims away the lam. Remove arris as before. Might sound rough and ready but
it works fine if you excercise a small degree of care.

Gw

Guess who

in reply to "Mary Mlinar-Stephens" on 24/03/2006 1:34 PM

24/03/2006 10:41 AM

On Fri, 24 Mar 2006 13:34:53 GMT, "Mary Mlinar-Stephens"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Hi to all in the group
>
>I am currently building a tool stand from a plan published in American
>Woodworker from 2000.
>
>I am at the point of deciding to use plastic laminate on all the top
>sections of the tool stand which is made of 3/4 MDF. The design calls for
>making slots in the top for a way to slide clamps into for holding wood you
>are working on.
>
>Here is my problem :
>
>I have only a circular saw and a small Craftsman bench saw. I would normally
>use a small router with a flush trimming bit to get an accurate nice edge to
>the laminated top for the slots.

It looks like the parts are in separate pieces, the "grooves" being
openings between them, so....

One possibility: Using an accurate straight edge guide, use your
router idea to *just* cut through the laminate; little stress, more
accurate cut. Then finish the cut[s] using the table saw, or circular
saw with a guide. You might even cut *just* inside the earlier router
cuts then clean the edges with a sander.

Either way, seal the ends against moisture when done.


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