transatlantic
Boom!
I've always wondered how you straighten a piece of bowed timber that is longer than the size of the jointer bed.
for example, this scenario :
I've been researching it for a while and the only real solution I came across was to make a long sled for your thicknesser, which works particularly well for twists (from what I have seen)
I guess like this (which can of course be scaled down) :
But then I came across this on wikipedia.
Has anyone tried this technique? or has perhaps a different technique?
for example, this scenario :
I've been researching it for a while and the only real solution I came across was to make a long sled for your thicknesser, which works particularly well for twists (from what I have seen)
I guess like this (which can of course be scaled down) :
But then I came across this on wikipedia.
To straighten a piece of bowed timber, the guard is temporarily swung out of the way. The machine is switched on and the timber is slowly lowered to the machine table, with the concave side down. A few cuts are made out of the red section "A". The timber is turned end for end and the same procedure is done to the section "B". This is repeated as required with the operator sighting along the length of the timber from time to time to check on straightness of the timber. When the timber is almost straight, the guard is replaced and the last cut is made in the normal way.
Twisted material is treated in a similar way. The operator lays the timber on the bed of the machine and rocks it slowly from side to side to estimate the amount of twist. If there is, say, 20mm of twist in the board, he holds the board level and takes 10mm off one end, then repeats it for the other end.
Has anyone tried this technique? or has perhaps a different technique?