View Single Post
  #11   Report Post  
Frank McVey
 
Posts: n/a
Default safer method for mitering short thin stock

Make yourself a "donkey's ear" shooting board, which is no more than a
vice-mounted jig which will hold the stock at 45 deg and provides a
reference bed along which you run a block plane. Works very well for small
items like your box.

Just had a thought and DAGS, and wouldn't you know it, Jeff Gorman has
covered the DESB on his excellent website. Says it all, but your one
needn't be quite so wide.

http://www.amgron.clara.net/planingp...eysearindex.ht
m

Cheers

Frank


"john moorhead" wrote in message
news:XI0Cb.510917$Fm2.492381@attbi_s04...
Folks -

I always end up painting myself into a corner on this one. I am building

a
number of small boxes with matching grain on mitered corners. How do I

cut
the miter safely. I have a 12" double tilting SCMS, but the box ends are
only about 5" long so my hand is too close to the blade for comfort. I

have
the saw tilted toward the "narrow" side rather than the 135 degree side to
combat earlier problems with tearout and material damage ( there are

rabbits
on both the top and bottom of the workpiece) Redwood splits and splinters
out very easily...

I could set up the table saw to crosscut the miter using the miter guage,
but I still have the same concerns.... I've done it, but it just didn't
*feel* safe, so I stopped.

To make the grain match perfectly on all four corners, I ripped 8/4 stock

in
half vertically, then the inside faces of the two pieces are turned to

face
outside, and then one side and one end are cut from each piece. If you

are
*VERY* careful with this set up and cut the miters as close to the final
size as possible then you can have continious grain on all four corners of
the box. If you have to trim the parts very much at all, the effect is
considerably reduced.

I guess I could double stick tape the workpieces to some longer

sacraficial
stock, but thought I'd ask y'all's 2c worth here. I didn't leave the

stock
long and then cut each box side off sequentially as I want the grain to
match and didn't think I could get each side *dead on* that way. If it
weren't a big deal, I think that would be the way to go.

Thanks in advance for your remarks....

John Moorhead
Lakeport, CA