Andy P Devon
Member
Relatively new to this...
Whilst chopping cross-grain (pairing out the gaps in dovetails, I keep doing what looks like crushing the fibres of the wood. By this I mean bending the ends of the 'straws' of the wood fibres (using Paul Sellers' analogue of wood being a bundle of straws).
Although most of this damaged material is hidden within the resultant joint, I'm not happy - all those YT videos out there with perfect cuts.....
This is particularly noticeable when I've used a mallet with the chisel.
I've checked my chisel is sharp - can shave my arm-hairs and slice paper cleanly.
I suspect it might be to do with the quality of the wood (it's unspecified 'white wood' from B+Q).
I have tried it with some reclaimed floorboards (oak??) and still get it, although less so.
Would anyone out there agree with this or is there a technique flaw I'm missing???? It feels like I must be doing something wrong as I never see the same thing happening in YT land.
Any help very much appreciated.
Whilst chopping cross-grain (pairing out the gaps in dovetails, I keep doing what looks like crushing the fibres of the wood. By this I mean bending the ends of the 'straws' of the wood fibres (using Paul Sellers' analogue of wood being a bundle of straws).
Although most of this damaged material is hidden within the resultant joint, I'm not happy - all those YT videos out there with perfect cuts.....
This is particularly noticeable when I've used a mallet with the chisel.
I've checked my chisel is sharp - can shave my arm-hairs and slice paper cleanly.
I suspect it might be to do with the quality of the wood (it's unspecified 'white wood' from B+Q).
I have tried it with some reclaimed floorboards (oak??) and still get it, although less so.
Would anyone out there agree with this or is there a technique flaw I'm missing???? It feels like I must be doing something wrong as I never see the same thing happening in YT land.
Any help very much appreciated.