Gary_S":1e6jd756 said:
My son and myself have spent hours in my garage/w shop trying to dimension a piece of maple. We think we get a flat surface on the jointer/planer it doesn't rock or roll on the cast iron surface of the table saw. However, putting it through the thicknesser we seem to make rhomboids and struggle to get the thickness even being out sometimes by as much as 2.5mm across the length of the board (1 metre). It is to make a strip of 5mm length to be laminated as a decorative feature on a guitar he is making. Are we being niaive expecting to get metal work precision with woodwork?
What is the section you are trying to achieve? 5mm x?
Small sections are awkward, if its 5mm x 10mm or similar you would be better planing a piece 10mm thick x say 50mm and ripping off a strip 5mm.
If you are doing a piece of maple to finish say 50mm x 5mm, then you should get the 5mm thickness ok, but the thicknesser wont like trying to machine a piece 50mm high x 5mm wide.
Better to make a piece 60mm wide, surface plane 1 face and 1 edge. Thickness to 5mm, rip on saw to 52mm, then go back to surface planer and plane off the saw marks to get to 50mm.
A thicknesser should be good to about 0,25mm, ignoring the ends of a board. The best accuracy on multiple pieces will mean putting them through in the same spot.