Fromey
Established Member
I've spent another weekend in the shed doing nothing much more that simply preparing stock. I have quite a small shed that is stuffed full. No room to swing a cat, literally. That means I have to be hand tools only. I've largely cracked the issue of ripping (I've given up on my Lynx rip saw and found a ryoba rip saw works like a hot knife through butter in comparison. In fact, I discovered a common garden Bahco cross cut saw works ten time better than the Lynx at ripping).
Invariably, if I rip a 1" thick plank into two, there is a lot of cupping that results from the change in tension (perhaps I shouldn't be ripping a board down the middle and trying to get two out of one; see below). So planing such a board down to 4 square by hand is a time consuming process. I've found I spend as much time simply preparing my stock as I do constructing anything. My local timber merchant is too expensive for thicknessing and not very convenient in any case.
Thus, I'm seriously considering buying a thicknesser;
http://www.axminster.co.uk/jet-jet-jwp- ... rod365273/
I think I could just about accommodate this suitcase sized planer in my shed.
Problem is, I know nothing about thicknessers. Would I be correct in thinking that if I passed a cupped board through a thicknesser, all it's likely to do is flatten it under pressure and then it will spring back to the same, slightly thinner, cupped board?
Is, in fact, the proper way to do things to throw 0.5" of wood away by scrub and jack planning the excess off in equal measures from both sides a 1" board?
Any advice much appreciated as I'm beginning to lose hope.
Invariably, if I rip a 1" thick plank into two, there is a lot of cupping that results from the change in tension (perhaps I shouldn't be ripping a board down the middle and trying to get two out of one; see below). So planing such a board down to 4 square by hand is a time consuming process. I've found I spend as much time simply preparing my stock as I do constructing anything. My local timber merchant is too expensive for thicknessing and not very convenient in any case.
Thus, I'm seriously considering buying a thicknesser;
http://www.axminster.co.uk/jet-jet-jwp- ... rod365273/
I think I could just about accommodate this suitcase sized planer in my shed.
Problem is, I know nothing about thicknessers. Would I be correct in thinking that if I passed a cupped board through a thicknesser, all it's likely to do is flatten it under pressure and then it will spring back to the same, slightly thinner, cupped board?
Is, in fact, the proper way to do things to throw 0.5" of wood away by scrub and jack planning the excess off in equal measures from both sides a 1" board?
Any advice much appreciated as I'm beginning to lose hope.