*I absolutely love this tool!!! The first one was defective and Dewalt replaced **MyBest.Tools** More bulky than the Bosch and Makita corded palm routers I have but worth it. Nice solid base*
That last little tidbit of the board thickness is very important... I made the mistake before looking up any tutorials and learned the hard way that if your material isn't thick enough, then the bearing won't be riding on the same spot when you flip it over so the cut on the second side will be deeper.
Thanks SO MUCH for this very informative video ... I'm usually pretty good with the common sense, but it never occurred to me to use a rounding bit and just flip the wood to make a bullnose cut. I was about to go out and buy a bullnose bit for $46.50 when I already owned a 1/4" rounding bit. I recently bought 1/4" half round at a local lumber yard for .25 cents a foot, now I'm making it for less than penny a foot. Thanks once again to you & RUclips.
Super excited to try this out with our refinishing of our stairs! Thank you for the informative video. Hoping we can make the bullnose on the stair tread look this nice.
Great tutorial. I’m very new to this… I’m getting a fishtail/cut in at the end of my sample cuts. I suppose I’m putting uneven pressure when holding the material?? Tips welcome! Thanks
I am wondering if you can give me some routing advice? I’m working with a lot of 1/8 thick material that is rectangular and I want to round the edges all the way around the material. What would be the best method to do that? Would you recommend that I use a jig on top of my material and move the material and jig together against the router? I’ve got a lot of material to bullnose and trying to find the most efficient method. Thank you for your time and consideration.
What kind of table is that? I don't have one and need to round my 16-3/4" Bruce.hardwood flooring pieces. I also need to make a few tongue-and-groove cuts. What might be a reasonable machine for me?
Hello, Thank you for contacting us. Great question! The ‘Ask an Expert’ section is currently for members of our online community. By becoming a member, you will have access to our expert’s knowledge in woodworking . With your membership you will also receive discounts on products and hours of Premium video content. If you are interested in becoming a member, please click on the special offer below: go.wwgoa.com/C21545
If you are doing a large production run, then tooling up with the dedicated bit is likely a great way to go. A 3/8" roundover is a more versatile bit that most woodworkers have in their arsenal, which is why it is used here.
Hi @Woodworkers Guild Premium I wonder if you can help me Im building guitar speaker cabinet have used 12mm plywood an constructed all sides using finger joints I've just ordered 1/4 rounding bit 9mm an im using a plunge router what's a suitable depth drop to set with that may I ask ? . Regards James
Great video. Very helpful. Thank you for sharing.
*I absolutely love this tool!!! The first one was defective and Dewalt replaced **MyBest.Tools** More bulky than the Bosch and Makita corded palm routers I have but worth it. Nice solid base*
That last little tidbit of the board thickness is very important... I made the mistake before looking up any tutorials and learned the hard way that if your material isn't thick enough, then the bearing won't be riding on the same spot when you flip it over so the cut on the second side will be deeper.
Thanks SO MUCH for this very informative video ... I'm usually pretty good with the common sense, but it never occurred to me to use a rounding bit and just flip the wood to make a bullnose cut. I was about to go out and buy a bullnose bit for $46.50 when I already owned a 1/4" rounding bit. I recently bought 1/4" half round at a local lumber yard for .25 cents a foot, now I'm making it for less than penny a foot. Thanks once again to you & RUclips.
I bought the bullnose bit🤦🏻♂️
Thanks for the video tutorial on properly making a bull nose cut.
Glad it was helpful!
Super excited to try this out with our refinishing of our stairs! Thank you for the informative video. Hoping we can make the bullnose on the stair tread look this nice.
Thank you. Very informative!
Made it look easy. Thanks for the video!
Great tutorial. I’m very new to this… I’m getting a fishtail/cut in at the end of my sample cuts. I suppose I’m putting uneven pressure when holding the material?? Tips welcome! Thanks
Excellant illustration and explaining! Thank you, excellently done! New sub! 👍
I am wondering if you can give me some routing advice? I’m working with a lot of 1/8 thick material that is rectangular and I want to round the edges all the way around the material. What would be the best method to do that? Would you recommend that I use a jig on top of my material and move the material and jig together against the router? I’ve got a lot of material to bullnose and trying to find the most efficient method. Thank you for your time and consideration.
What kind of table is that? I don't have one and need to round my 16-3/4" Bruce.hardwood flooring pieces. I also need to make a few tongue-and-groove cuts. What might be a reasonable machine for me?
I'm impressed with your noise protection head band. Can you tell me what make/model it is?
Hi Tom. They are called IsoTunes Pro and you can find them here: amzn.to/2othY2q
Otis Technology Ear Shield Hearing Protection. I got mine from Amazon about three years ago.
So the second time he raises the bit the measurement is a unt hair?
Hello,
Thank you for contacting us. Great question! The ‘Ask an Expert’ section is currently for members of our online community. By becoming a member, you will have access to our expert’s knowledge in woodworking . With your membership you will also receive discounts on products and hours of Premium video content.
If you are interested in becoming a member, please click on the special offer below: go.wwgoa.com/C21545
correct me if I am wrong but can I make tenons this way?
Yes, it is possible to make tenons using a router table with a fence and miter gauge.
Half bull nose's are a thing too.
what happen to this channel only one video?
This look easier then a Freud 3/8" Radius Half Round Bit with 1/2" Shank (82-116), is there a reason why you don't use a bit similar to this one?
If you are doing a large production run, then tooling up with the dedicated bit is likely a great way to go. A 3/8" roundover is a more versatile bit that most woodworkers have in their arsenal, which is why it is used here.
This time I will do it manually with the help of Woodglut designs.
Hi @Woodworkers Guild Premium I wonder if you can help me Im building guitar speaker cabinet have used 12mm plywood an constructed all sides using finger joints I've just ordered 1/4 rounding bit 9mm an im using a plunge router what's a suitable depth drop to set with that may I ask ? .
Regards
James
Brilliant video, thanks !