The usual advice (apart from reading the grain) is to hone the blades, perhaps with a back bevel, take small cuts under 1mm down to perhaps 0.3mm, and maybe dampen the surface with water to swell / tighten the fibres, and slow the feed rate if you're lucky enough to have variable speed.
Tried these today (except feedrate) thicknessing some longish lengths* of curly maple when it ocurred to me that the very light cut approach might be compromised by my serrated infeed roller..... Mine bites in so that a 0.2mm pass just removes the marks. I think a fine pass makes the tearout worse, the feed roller's cross grain "nicks" making a weak point encouraging the problem. Possible?
Try a fine pass only if you've a rubber infeed roller?
Is this reason for choosing a rubber infeed roller?
If you can't aviod reversing grain, is a 10 to 15 deg back bevel a real advantage?
Should you get a backbevel ground at sharpening time?
How set serrated infeed roller pressure?
Thoughts gratefully received!
* could not cut shorter
Tried these today (except feedrate) thicknessing some longish lengths* of curly maple when it ocurred to me that the very light cut approach might be compromised by my serrated infeed roller..... Mine bites in so that a 0.2mm pass just removes the marks. I think a fine pass makes the tearout worse, the feed roller's cross grain "nicks" making a weak point encouraging the problem. Possible?
Try a fine pass only if you've a rubber infeed roller?
Is this reason for choosing a rubber infeed roller?
If you can't aviod reversing grain, is a 10 to 15 deg back bevel a real advantage?
Should you get a backbevel ground at sharpening time?
How set serrated infeed roller pressure?
Thoughts gratefully received!
* could not cut shorter