I've been given some boards of whitewood (probably 5ths or worse, a colleague bought more than they needed for some DIY), which is generally a material I avoid like the plague, but as it was there I cracked on making a little wall-mounted cabinet.
I rapidly remembered why I dislike it, making the carcass I cut my dovetails then clamped to a sacrificial board in the vice to remove the waste with a chisel, even with a chisel sharp enough to shave with, the sacrificial board and taking very small cuts the endgrain got well and truly munched, I got tear out on the outside faces of the boards , and generally just ended up turning into a mess.
Thankfully, I was always intending to put mouldings on the top and bottom, which will hide the issue, but as I have more to use up, I'd quite like to know if there's a secret trick to working with it, as even on the shooting board with a low angle plane It gives a rough finish on endgrain, and the extra fine edged (20 degree, convex bevel) chisels I keep for working with soft and/or brittle timber make bugger all difference.
Any and all suggestions welcome.
P.S. The other wood I was working with today on another project was reclaimed Jarrah, which was rather pleasant by comparison.
I rapidly remembered why I dislike it, making the carcass I cut my dovetails then clamped to a sacrificial board in the vice to remove the waste with a chisel, even with a chisel sharp enough to shave with, the sacrificial board and taking very small cuts the endgrain got well and truly munched, I got tear out on the outside faces of the boards , and generally just ended up turning into a mess.
Thankfully, I was always intending to put mouldings on the top and bottom, which will hide the issue, but as I have more to use up, I'd quite like to know if there's a secret trick to working with it, as even on the shooting board with a low angle plane It gives a rough finish on endgrain, and the extra fine edged (20 degree, convex bevel) chisels I keep for working with soft and/or brittle timber make bugger all difference.
Any and all suggestions welcome.
P.S. The other wood I was working with today on another project was reclaimed Jarrah, which was rather pleasant by comparison.