Night Train
Established Member
I have a student who has been making a semicircular table of about 18" radius. He wanted to rout out the semicircle from solid timber he had glued up to form the table top. The straight side of the semicircle was along the grain. I first made sure that the end grain at the start and finish of the semicircle was well supported for cutting through. I set him up so that he could rout out in short sections leaving the waste still attached at points along the curve to support the router on its trammel and to protect the edges from splitting. Once he was all the way through the thickness he was then to rout out the remaining points of contact in several passes to release the waste.
That worked and he got his table top.
Unfortunately he made it too thin at 16mm and so glued up another.
This time, he set himself up and in one pass cut the full 20mm thickness on one pass 2mm away from his cut line. He then reset the trammel tried to cut to the cut line.
The problem was that he was now cutting against the grain for the first quarter circle and as he got close to the short straight grain he split the wood.
It is now glued back but what would be the beat way to recover this without splitting his work again?
He is adamant that he wants to rout it rather then finish it with hand tools.
That worked and he got his table top.
Unfortunately he made it too thin at 16mm and so glued up another.
This time, he set himself up and in one pass cut the full 20mm thickness on one pass 2mm away from his cut line. He then reset the trammel tried to cut to the cut line.
The problem was that he was now cutting against the grain for the first quarter circle and as he got close to the short straight grain he split the wood.
It is now glued back but what would be the beat way to recover this without splitting his work again?
He is adamant that he wants to rout it rather then finish it with hand tools.