Hello,
I've got myself a planner/thicknesser (the AH106PT from Axminster), its second hand but really light use (and only a few years old). I think its setup correctly, the beds are level when adjusted to "0" and look coplanner to me and my straight edge. Blades are reasonable and setup OK (they catch a straight edge and move about 10mm across the blades when rotated by hand - as per the instructions).
The trouble is my technique must be poor as pretty much every time I try to plan something flat, it ends up as a taper. I take more of the front of the wood and little to none at the end.
I apply light pressure downwards on the infeed table as it enters the cut then as soon as I can I transfer pressure to the outfeed table (never putting pressure on the infeed side again). I think what's happening is that the initial cut takes the difference between beds off and as the wood moves onto the outfeed table, the back edge of the wood lifts a little from the infeed. This seems to mean I take a cut for the first half of the wood but not really from the back. The more I take it over the cutter, the more pronounced it becomes until I end up with a banana.
I've based my technique on Matt Estlea's video
Any advice or thoughts?
I've got myself a planner/thicknesser (the AH106PT from Axminster), its second hand but really light use (and only a few years old). I think its setup correctly, the beds are level when adjusted to "0" and look coplanner to me and my straight edge. Blades are reasonable and setup OK (they catch a straight edge and move about 10mm across the blades when rotated by hand - as per the instructions).
The trouble is my technique must be poor as pretty much every time I try to plan something flat, it ends up as a taper. I take more of the front of the wood and little to none at the end.
I apply light pressure downwards on the infeed table as it enters the cut then as soon as I can I transfer pressure to the outfeed table (never putting pressure on the infeed side again). I think what's happening is that the initial cut takes the difference between beds off and as the wood moves onto the outfeed table, the back edge of the wood lifts a little from the infeed. This seems to mean I take a cut for the first half of the wood but not really from the back. The more I take it over the cutter, the more pronounced it becomes until I end up with a banana.
I've based my technique on Matt Estlea's video
Any advice or thoughts?