RichardWood
New member
Hi,
I've just purchased a flattening bit which I expect to be quite good, as it seems pretty well made and it's an expensive one (for me, at least): https://amzn.eu/d/9aDEjcN
I used it yesterday and today and I'm getting tons of kickback when I'm trying to flatten some end grain wood using a DIY router sled. I seem to be getting it even when I'm only taking off the tiniest amount, and I've taken a couple of chunks out when I took off any more (approx 2mm). I can confirm the sled and slab are flat and not rocking (significantly at least). The slab is double-sided taped down and seems stable.
i'm moving the router along pretty much under its own weight, not trying to press down on it hard or anything like that. I'm getting the issue even when taking a slight pass only a little further than the previous pass.
I've used this router sled before with a different flattening bit and also with a straight cut bit and not had any trouble, but not for a while.
My router is the Bosch POF 1400 Ace plunge router. The bit is quite wide, so I'm running it at around 1.5 on the dial, which I guess is something like 14000 RPM.
I think the impression that the router is making on the wood when it 'catches' is probably going to be telling as to what's going on, so I've attached a photo. It's strange that I'm getting a circle in the wood when it happens, because I enter the wood from the side at a constant depth, so I'm really not sure how it's happening.
Any ideas what I'm doing wrong here?
Thanks!
I've just purchased a flattening bit which I expect to be quite good, as it seems pretty well made and it's an expensive one (for me, at least): https://amzn.eu/d/9aDEjcN
I used it yesterday and today and I'm getting tons of kickback when I'm trying to flatten some end grain wood using a DIY router sled. I seem to be getting it even when I'm only taking off the tiniest amount, and I've taken a couple of chunks out when I took off any more (approx 2mm). I can confirm the sled and slab are flat and not rocking (significantly at least). The slab is double-sided taped down and seems stable.
i'm moving the router along pretty much under its own weight, not trying to press down on it hard or anything like that. I'm getting the issue even when taking a slight pass only a little further than the previous pass.
I've used this router sled before with a different flattening bit and also with a straight cut bit and not had any trouble, but not for a while.
My router is the Bosch POF 1400 Ace plunge router. The bit is quite wide, so I'm running it at around 1.5 on the dial, which I guess is something like 14000 RPM.
I think the impression that the router is making on the wood when it 'catches' is probably going to be telling as to what's going on, so I've attached a photo. It's strange that I'm getting a circle in the wood when it happens, because I enter the wood from the side at a constant depth, so I'm really not sure how it's happening.
Any ideas what I'm doing wrong here?
Thanks!