Planing Thin Strips
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- Опубликовано: 1 окт 2024
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FIRST!
The Wood Whisperer Another short clip, nice : )
The Wood Whisperer I dig that guy who says "Hit it!" when the music kicks in at 0:19
The Wood Whisperer so the trick is to place your work piece on a shellacked surface, gotcha!
so you would say shellac is a good helper to be used for this? ;)
If you aren't livin' on the edge, you are takin' up too much room!
Is that a Festool drum set back there? Sweet!
DRUMS! I've heard you can put regular masking tape on both surfaces and superglue between them instead of double sided tape. I would imagine that might work well for this purpose should you need to go very thin.
I have not seen this technique! Awesome!
There is something very comforting in knowing one of your favorite woodworkers also has not see this technique... It seems we will always be learning!
Good solution to that problem!
I wish I had watched this video 2 hours ago :) for the first time ever, I was planing some strips that were about 3/16" and on the first piece I fed in, I got a small, but jarring kickback (which has never happened to me with a planer before! holy $#!+). the kickback hit the tips of all my fingers, and it took me 10 seconds to be convinced that I hadn't actually injured myself (thankfully i had not). further experimentation was done with a push block to feed, rather than my hand -- but the results were still more of the "wood chipper" variety, rather than "planer" variety. Now that I know this recommendation, I'll give it a try the next time this task comes up. Thank you for posting it (8 years ago)!!
You can also use 2 pieces of masking tape CAd back to back to create 'double sided' tape, and use that to adhere the strip to the backer.
My 3 favorite words in woodworking..... LET'S FIND OUT!
I've done it with the thick board stationary with thin pieces slide under. No glue needed.
I use your approach regularly for strips too long to fit on my planning jig which is just a 4' flat pieces of mdf board.
I've planed strips down to just under 1/16" thick before the planer mangled the leading end. That was just by lifting the trailing end as the piece went into the planer and then lifting the end coming out. I'll have to try this out and see if my planer will allow me to get strips even thinner.
Wow, impressed you got that so thin!
Cool technique, Marc. Great tip.
"I don't know how thin you could get this."
"So let's find out!"
I use this method to plane my ukulele sides to 3/32 of an inch. I glue the 4 corners with Titebond to an unsealed piece of plywood then trim off the ends. Thanks for showing the tip.
Spray adhesive on the sled could give you a more permanent tacky sticky maybe?
that's impressively thin, thinner than you will ever need, unless you're making paper
Cool! Now i Can make my own edge band with this !
Thanks for sharing this marc!
Cool. I've been trying to find a way to do this. I don't have the money for a drum sander but would love to have one. I do have a planer and I'm going to try this technique!
Now... That's a thin strip..
My thoughts would have been to make a reverse air-hockey table to hold down the piece if one were to do this with a hand-held belt sander, planer or hand plane.
thanks,
sharp cheap fast tip, keep 'em coming, chief !
and keep on trucking !
It's a lot easier to get this result when you are using a Powermatic with a helical carbide cutter.
As always, another great video. Oh yeah, and I dig the ocarina on the wall in the back.
Why is the stop at the back end? The planer is pulling the strip forward relative to the base, not backwards.
The rollers are only pulling in the carrier board. The stop is there to prevent the blades from throwing the piece out. Would need to be much more generous with the glue without the stop ,then try again because you would destroy the strip trying to unglue it.
@@philthycox2515 i disagree. The rollers are contacting the workpiece, not the carrier board. In the situation shown in the video, the workpiece is driven through the planer and the CA glue is pulling the carrier board along with it. The workpiece needs to be prevented from sliding forward with respect to the carrier. A cleat at the leading edge of the workpiece (or gluing the workpiece to the carrier) keeps the carrier moving along with the workpiece (that is driven by the rollers).
Note that the same carrier sled can be used with a drim sander. But there, the carrier (not the workpiece) is driven (or pushed), so the cleat needs to be at the rear of the carrier.
That all being said, the idea of using the glue to prevent the leading edge from getting picked up by the cutter is a good idea - especially when the workpiece is very thin and can easily bend upwards in front of the infeed roller.
The cleat should be at the trailing edge of the carrier. An explanation is in my reply to Philthy Cox below.
I need a 1/17in board AHHH why is making a skateboard so hard
I had that idea awhile ago but never tried it as my planer gets my stuff as thin as I need.
ONE OF MY MANY PROBLEM SOLVED.
THANKS
DOC
MEBANE, NC
What shellac do you use? And do you use varnish?
I've always wondered how to make paper out of walnut, now I know.
Hi Marc
I have been watching allot of your videos. Other than your shop and equipment that looks awesome you never do furniture builds other than a quick flash here and there. The furniture you produce looks really good! Make a video on building the entire rocking chair pls.
I take issue with "never" but it sounds like you might enjoy the Guild, where you'll find that rocking chair series as well as many other great projects:
thewoodwhispererguild.com
How about just using a handplane???
thank you Mark i was wondering if that would work
Great tips. Thank You! Is that you playing the drums in the background? If it is , you play very well!
woodrat1952 That's not me playing, but that's a beat I could play. I'm not a very good drummer but I can lay down the funk when I need to. ;)
You read my mind... this was something I was wondering about just yesterday and decided to look for today.
Mistrblank And holy crap you got it way thinner than I ever was even thinking.
Now that is thin!
This is gold. Thanks man.
If I ever need to make a thin strip of veneer by wasting 95% of the original material, I know how to do it! lol
I love you!
Great tip. Thanks!
Not first.
i use a hand plane
Heino Poulsen my condolences. :)
Science! :)
It's a pretty looking wood too, what type is it. Black walnut maybe?
Randy Wright Yessir!
Thanks fur the response Mark, I have played the dovetails video for a friend and they laughed as much as I did still my fav. Video of yours. Me whispering "dovetails"
What type(s)/brand(s) of CA glue do you use and where do you get it?
johnsobj Links are in the writeup: www.thewoodwhisperer.com/videos/planing-thin-strips/
Perfect. I should have looked a bit more. Thanks and please keep it up! Great work.
how thin did you get it?
Jared S I never measured it but it was thinner than anyone would ever need for something woodworking related. :) At least as thin as most commercial veneer.