Prawn_Cracker
Established Member
Hi All
I need to reproduce some bead and butt style tongue and groove cladding, it’s for my property. However, I’m in need of some help and advice to make sure I’m heading the right direction.
I want to use tulip and the plan originally was to get my local timber yard to supply 160 metres (cut to lengths) of 16mm x 100mm timber PAR. With me then machining the T&G with the bead and butt profile. The costs coming back aren’t going to give me much change out of £700. Funds on this project are really tight and if I can save a lot of money but use more of my own time then that works really well because I’m not charging myself for work for myself!
My thought now, instead of requesting fully dimensioned PAR timber, was to buy the required volume of tulip, in suitable lengths to allow me to cross cut out the required board length with minimal waste, ideally just the kerf of my sliding mitre saw if I can help it. But to have the timber; dimensioned and planed to 100mm on two of the opposite faces. Then on my table saw, with a 25 tooth rip blade, to rip out the boards and run them through this thicknesser:
https://www.speedyservices.com/12_0081-h-thicknesser
and finish out with a board that’s 16mm x 100mm x 1.25m. A weekend hire on the above thicknesser is quite reasonable and I do not own or have access to a thicknesser or planer thicknesser.
Preparing this volume of stock isn’t something I’ve done before, I usually get the timber merchant to prepare it or it’s small then I’ll rip and hand plane it. But I am so very short of funds I’d like to see if I can handle this one myself.
As a result though there are a number of questions so all and any help would be really great. I think these are the main ones are:
1. Is getting the timber merchants to dimension and plane the two faces at a thickness of 100mm, so that I can just rip out boards and thickness them to 16mm sensible? Even if it is sensible in that it’s saving me a bit of time, am I just putting labour and tooling costs back into the project that I am trying to save? I don’t really have a good idea on what additional cost this bit of machining is adding, any ideas?
2. One of the reasons for above approach is that I save on the hire cost of a more substantial planar thicknesser. The next one up from this on hire is https://www.speedyservices.com/12_0080- ... hicknesser I have never used one before, I know, from reading contributions on this forum, that there are good guidelines on how to safely use this machinery and I am happy to do this but the cost to hire is proportionately more and am I in a bit of a horses for courses here? The money I save on taking on all the preparation is lost in the additional cost of hiring a bigger tool?
3. Can someone give me a guideline on wastage so that I order the right volume of wood? If I know what my finished board size needs to be can anyone give me a rough rule of thumb what I add on for lossess and planning (if that’s possible) so I can calculate the right amount? I can probably ask the timber yard to supply me the right volume on the basis that I will be ripping an thicknessing but it’d be really helpful to hear from others experienced in this.
4. If I want to finish on a 16mm board can any give me a good idea on what dimension I should rip to make sure I can thickness to this dimension? If that’s possible?
5. Has anyone hired a thicknesser and had a good experience with them? I’m not sure how often they change their blades?! I have hired plenty of tools in the past and they are usually really well used!
Thanks in advance of any help. Seriously any and all tips and advice appreciated. I am probably making this far more complicated than it need be. It's just not something I do and want to make sure I am headed the right way.
Cheers
Andy
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
I need to reproduce some bead and butt style tongue and groove cladding, it’s for my property. However, I’m in need of some help and advice to make sure I’m heading the right direction.
I want to use tulip and the plan originally was to get my local timber yard to supply 160 metres (cut to lengths) of 16mm x 100mm timber PAR. With me then machining the T&G with the bead and butt profile. The costs coming back aren’t going to give me much change out of £700. Funds on this project are really tight and if I can save a lot of money but use more of my own time then that works really well because I’m not charging myself for work for myself!
My thought now, instead of requesting fully dimensioned PAR timber, was to buy the required volume of tulip, in suitable lengths to allow me to cross cut out the required board length with minimal waste, ideally just the kerf of my sliding mitre saw if I can help it. But to have the timber; dimensioned and planed to 100mm on two of the opposite faces. Then on my table saw, with a 25 tooth rip blade, to rip out the boards and run them through this thicknesser:
https://www.speedyservices.com/12_0081-h-thicknesser
and finish out with a board that’s 16mm x 100mm x 1.25m. A weekend hire on the above thicknesser is quite reasonable and I do not own or have access to a thicknesser or planer thicknesser.
Preparing this volume of stock isn’t something I’ve done before, I usually get the timber merchant to prepare it or it’s small then I’ll rip and hand plane it. But I am so very short of funds I’d like to see if I can handle this one myself.
As a result though there are a number of questions so all and any help would be really great. I think these are the main ones are:
1. Is getting the timber merchants to dimension and plane the two faces at a thickness of 100mm, so that I can just rip out boards and thickness them to 16mm sensible? Even if it is sensible in that it’s saving me a bit of time, am I just putting labour and tooling costs back into the project that I am trying to save? I don’t really have a good idea on what additional cost this bit of machining is adding, any ideas?
2. One of the reasons for above approach is that I save on the hire cost of a more substantial planar thicknesser. The next one up from this on hire is https://www.speedyservices.com/12_0080- ... hicknesser I have never used one before, I know, from reading contributions on this forum, that there are good guidelines on how to safely use this machinery and I am happy to do this but the cost to hire is proportionately more and am I in a bit of a horses for courses here? The money I save on taking on all the preparation is lost in the additional cost of hiring a bigger tool?
3. Can someone give me a guideline on wastage so that I order the right volume of wood? If I know what my finished board size needs to be can anyone give me a rough rule of thumb what I add on for lossess and planning (if that’s possible) so I can calculate the right amount? I can probably ask the timber yard to supply me the right volume on the basis that I will be ripping an thicknessing but it’d be really helpful to hear from others experienced in this.
4. If I want to finish on a 16mm board can any give me a good idea on what dimension I should rip to make sure I can thickness to this dimension? If that’s possible?
5. Has anyone hired a thicknesser and had a good experience with them? I’m not sure how often they change their blades?! I have hired plenty of tools in the past and they are usually really well used!
Thanks in advance of any help. Seriously any and all tips and advice appreciated. I am probably making this far more complicated than it need be. It's just not something I do and want to make sure I am headed the right way.
Cheers
Andy
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk