Nomad
Member
I tried running an elm board through my thicknesser the other day, and the surface came out wavy or undulating. Other bits of wood (like maple) seem okay.
The bit of elm is slab sawn, 1m long, about 9" wide and 45mm thick (sorry for the mixed units). It was planed flat before I started. The thicknesser is the portable Clarke 10" one sold by Machine Mart. I was taking pretty light cuts - was creeping up on it with 1/4 and 1/2 turns of the handle with a view to skimming the surface to see how the wood planed.
The undulations are across the grain (parallel to the blades), about 1mm deep, and have a wavelength of about 50mm. The transition from high to low is quite smooth - not like snipe at the end. They're also only in the middle of the length of the board - the first and last 10" or so are flat. I was trying to support the board as it went through to avoid snipe, but not consciously pulling it upwards, especially during the main pass, where I just let the machine drive it through.
This is the heaviest bit of wood that I've put through the machine. Other bits that have gone through have been maple, either thinner, shorter, wide boards, or longer, narrow bits of similar thickness. No undulation on any of those, and supporting it when it's planing near the ends seems to help reduce snipe.
What could be causing this?
The bit of elm is slab sawn, 1m long, about 9" wide and 45mm thick (sorry for the mixed units). It was planed flat before I started. The thicknesser is the portable Clarke 10" one sold by Machine Mart. I was taking pretty light cuts - was creeping up on it with 1/4 and 1/2 turns of the handle with a view to skimming the surface to see how the wood planed.
The undulations are across the grain (parallel to the blades), about 1mm deep, and have a wavelength of about 50mm. The transition from high to low is quite smooth - not like snipe at the end. They're also only in the middle of the length of the board - the first and last 10" or so are flat. I was trying to support the board as it went through to avoid snipe, but not consciously pulling it upwards, especially during the main pass, where I just let the machine drive it through.
This is the heaviest bit of wood that I've put through the machine. Other bits that have gone through have been maple, either thinner, shorter, wide boards, or longer, narrow bits of similar thickness. No undulation on any of those, and supporting it when it's planing near the ends seems to help reduce snipe.
What could be causing this?