andersonec
Established Member
Am I being daft or isn't the direction of rotation be wanting to push the wood back towards you? it sounds like it is pulling it through.
Andy
Andy
knappers":6ojuo241 said:Can I just ask a stupid question? As you feed the wood under the roller, what's to stop it getting fired out the other end?
Thanks
Si.
andersonec":6ojuo241 said:Am I being daft or isn't the direction of rotation be wanting to push the wood back towards you? it sounds like it is pulling it through.
Andy
Gerard Scanlan":383kzgid said:Stupid questions are always welcome because they are sometimes not as silly as you think. I hold the wood back slightly as I feed it over the table and under the roller, once it is almost all the way through I catch on the other side and ensure that it finishes the passage at more or less the same speed. I assume this is the same for a planner/thicknesser. It only gets launched at the last centimetre or so because the rest of the time the friction of the whole surface on the table is far greater than the friction across the drum. The sander is one supposed to take off a small amount at each pass.
The plywood is completely smooth, as easily as smooth as mdf would have been, it just doesn't look it because of the dark and light strips caused by the end grain being intermitently at 90 degrees to the piece adjacent to it. This is not the cause of the abrasive load tearing. The original 1950's plan I used suggested plywood. I don't really see how running the drum in the other direction would stop the abrasive from tearing as it would actually increase the load on it.
CHJ":2agvgdcy said:Surely you should feed against the direction of rotation so that the drum is not trying to climb on the work piece.
Gerard Scanlan":2x0n01dr said:I have tried paper backed and linnen backed abrasives but they both shear off at the brackets after 10 minutes of sanding.
Any ideas where I am going wrong?
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