Eric The Viking
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- Joined
- 19 Jan 2010
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A thread in the For Sale section got me wondering. I too have been thinking about getting a mitre lock cutter, for kitchen/workshop drawers and possibly small boxes (Christmas presents loom!), but I've never used one.
Everywhere they're sold there are usually pretty pictures and diagrams of lovely, beautifully-fitting joints. BUT the penny's just dropped: when you cut the vertically-held side of the joint, you end up running the outfeed side of the workpiece on the arris of the new mitre. That's if you let gravity have free reign.
Doesn't that risk damage to the joint at its most visible/fragile point?
I can imagine clamping on a batten, to run on the top edge of the tall fence, but I'm guessing. And there's also breakout to consider - harder to deal with on the vertical pass, too (clamps everywhere!).
They can't be that awful, as there seem to be loads about, so what's the trick to them, if there is one?
Cheers,
E.
(who likes to look before he leaps)
Everywhere they're sold there are usually pretty pictures and diagrams of lovely, beautifully-fitting joints. BUT the penny's just dropped: when you cut the vertically-held side of the joint, you end up running the outfeed side of the workpiece on the arris of the new mitre. That's if you let gravity have free reign.
Doesn't that risk damage to the joint at its most visible/fragile point?
I can imagine clamping on a batten, to run on the top edge of the tall fence, but I'm guessing. And there's also breakout to consider - harder to deal with on the vertical pass, too (clamps everywhere!).
They can't be that awful, as there seem to be loads about, so what's the trick to them, if there is one?
Cheers,
E.
(who likes to look before he leaps)