Vv

V

08/06/2008 11:13 AM

using a router/table a jointer

Hello everyone,
I have a Bosch tabletop router table and have been trying for days to
set it up to edge-joint 3/4 stock for edge gluing. No matter what I
do the piece comes out sort of teeter-totterish. I have a split fench
using a 1/16 shim on the outfeed side which I have tried flushing up
with the bering, or just a little shy. No matter what I do every
piece of wood totters when I put it on a flat surface. (Tablesaw...)
Anybody have any ideas what I'm doing wrong? I've tried everything
but replacing the 1/2 shank Rockler straight-cutting bit!
Thanks


This topic has 3 replies

DM

Doug Miller

in reply to V on 08/06/2008 11:13 AM

08/06/2008 4:56 PM

In article <e226bf49-0987-4fe3-abf0-
[email protected]>, [email protected] says...
> Hello everyone,
> I have a Bosch tabletop router table and have been trying for days to
> set it up to edge-joint 3/4 stock for edge gluing. No matter what I
> do the piece comes out sort of teeter-totterish.

In addition to all of the other things that have been suggested... is
your stock flat? If the face of your stock won't lay flat on the surface
of your router table, you're never going to get a good edge jointed on
it.

lL

[email protected] (Larry W)

in reply to V on 08/06/2008 11:13 AM

08/06/2008 7:52 PM

Are you maintaining consistent contact with the oufeed side of the fence
once enough stock is in contact with it? Assuming everything is straight
& flat as it should be, once enough stock is contacting the outfeed
side of the fence, you should not be using the infeed side to guide the
stock. Is it possible that the teeter-totter you speak of is just some
snipe at the beginning or end of the cut? If so, it may be unavoidable
but you can compensate by using longer stock than the finished size
and cutting to length later.

All that said, though, I would recommend that if you have a halfway
decent tablesaw, you look into one of the methods used for jointing
an edge on the saw. I use a carrier-board and with a good blade can
make a glue-joint quality cut very quickly, perhaps at the most requiring
a pass or 2 with a jointer plane but usually that is not necessary.




--
Often wrong, never in doubt.

Larry Wasserman - Baltimore Maryland - lwasserm(a)sdf. lonestar. org

Pn

Phisherman

in reply to V on 08/06/2008 11:13 AM

08/06/2008 3:29 PM

On Sun, 8 Jun 2008 11:13:01 -0700 (PDT), V <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Hello everyone,
>I have a Bosch tabletop router table and have been trying for days to
>set it up to edge-joint 3/4 stock for edge gluing. No matter what I
>do the piece comes out sort of teeter-totterish. I have a split fench
>using a 1/16 shim on the outfeed side which I have tried flushing up
>with the bering, or just a little shy. No matter what I do every
>piece of wood totters when I put it on a flat surface. (Tablesaw...)
>Anybody have any ideas what I'm doing wrong? I've tried everything
>but replacing the 1/2 shank Rockler straight-cutting bit!
>Thanks

Check your fences and table for flatness. Your shim may be causing a
problem. I doubt a bit (even a bad one) would cause a teeter-totter.


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