bp122
Expert at Jibber-Jabber
I have discussed a mistake I made on a picture frame on another thread where I had to use thin walnut pieces to cover the said mistake.
Now, I had a small (50x20x30mm) walnut piece which I cut up into four strips of 50x20mm, planed it and then split them length wise to get two strips and planed the good edges to have a bevel and planed the split edges together in the vice to be straight. Altogether I ended up with eight strips of about 3mm thick, 50mm long and 8mm wide, - two per joint.
It was extremely difficult to do this.
I didn't want to use my table saw for two reasons:
1. The noise - I did this at 11 pm at night.
2. Safety - being so small, I couldn't risk holding the handpiece with my hands.
How do you guys hold workpieces this small for planing?
I have a dining table converted to a Workbench (I call it Michael Flatley because it dances like him during use) with a record 52 1/2 vice which is badly mounted (isn't straight or level with the top) with the waviest two bits of plywood for jaws.
I used a no. 4 and a no. 5 plane as I don't have anything smaller.
When I pinched the thin bits in the vice, unsurprisingly they bowed a lot.
And the strips weren't even long enough that you can clamp one end while planing the other save then switch.
How do you guys do it?
Now, I had a small (50x20x30mm) walnut piece which I cut up into four strips of 50x20mm, planed it and then split them length wise to get two strips and planed the good edges to have a bevel and planed the split edges together in the vice to be straight. Altogether I ended up with eight strips of about 3mm thick, 50mm long and 8mm wide, - two per joint.
It was extremely difficult to do this.
I didn't want to use my table saw for two reasons:
1. The noise - I did this at 11 pm at night.
2. Safety - being so small, I couldn't risk holding the handpiece with my hands.
How do you guys hold workpieces this small for planing?
I have a dining table converted to a Workbench (I call it Michael Flatley because it dances like him during use) with a record 52 1/2 vice which is badly mounted (isn't straight or level with the top) with the waviest two bits of plywood for jaws.
I used a no. 4 and a no. 5 plane as I don't have anything smaller.
When I pinched the thin bits in the vice, unsurprisingly they bowed a lot.
And the strips weren't even long enough that you can clamp one end while planing the other save then switch.
How do you guys do it?