woodbrains
Established Member
Hello,
I've just been thicknessing some timber, nice new set of knives installed and I'm getting a bit of snipe on the infeed end. TBH the machine always has a bit as long as I've had it and I've always just hand planed it out. But today it was bugging me a bit, I should be able to get better on such a solid machine. So I thought I'd check the table for flatness. Now, you might think 'why hasn't he done this before?' as I have adjusted the machine in every way and keep it well maintained. The truth is, I've not had a decent engineers straight edge!
I've been making jigs with some 3/4in tee track and found this is amazingly flat for an extrusion, so much so, it shows how embarrassingly out of flat my Axmonster straight edge is, horrible, horrible tool, that. So I used the track on my thicknesses table and find there is a bump in the middle. I've tested few lengths of the extrusion on the beds of my planer, ( flat as a fluke that machine) all show they are true, so there is definitely a bump in the thicknesses table. Don't have any feeler gauges to hand, but I can rock the straight edge like a see saw. Transversely, the bed is reasonable at any point, but lengthwise, the hump is evident all across. I guess the gap at either end of the straight edge must be about 15 thou or more over 24 inches of bed length.
So, does anyone think I should think about having it surface ground flat? Has anyone had something like this done and is it worth the expense. Does anyone know the cost roughly of this, I haven't a clue what I should expect? Anyone recommend an engineers shop that will do it, would a cylinder head grinding workshop be able to do this? The bed is 12 by 24 inches approx.
Mike.
I've just been thicknessing some timber, nice new set of knives installed and I'm getting a bit of snipe on the infeed end. TBH the machine always has a bit as long as I've had it and I've always just hand planed it out. But today it was bugging me a bit, I should be able to get better on such a solid machine. So I thought I'd check the table for flatness. Now, you might think 'why hasn't he done this before?' as I have adjusted the machine in every way and keep it well maintained. The truth is, I've not had a decent engineers straight edge!
I've been making jigs with some 3/4in tee track and found this is amazingly flat for an extrusion, so much so, it shows how embarrassingly out of flat my Axmonster straight edge is, horrible, horrible tool, that. So I used the track on my thicknesses table and find there is a bump in the middle. I've tested few lengths of the extrusion on the beds of my planer, ( flat as a fluke that machine) all show they are true, so there is definitely a bump in the thicknesses table. Don't have any feeler gauges to hand, but I can rock the straight edge like a see saw. Transversely, the bed is reasonable at any point, but lengthwise, the hump is evident all across. I guess the gap at either end of the straight edge must be about 15 thou or more over 24 inches of bed length.
So, does anyone think I should think about having it surface ground flat? Has anyone had something like this done and is it worth the expense. Does anyone know the cost roughly of this, I haven't a clue what I should expect? Anyone recommend an engineers shop that will do it, would a cylinder head grinding workshop be able to do this? The bed is 12 by 24 inches approx.
Mike.