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Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
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Qx - How to Clean Up a Routed Inlet
Botched a quicky piece this weekend and trying to figure out if
there's a fix. Is there a router bit that acts like a sander, that is, not real aggressive, but can be used on sides of a cut to clean them up? Cuts are only about 3/8 deep and I've tried sanding by hand and scraping with my gunsmithing scrapers, but to no avail. Reason for asking: Wandered by my local purveyor of curly wood Saturday. Searching through the scrap pile when one of the folks working there guided me to three hunks (flitches) of maple. Seems he was a fiddle/guitar maker. He said these 24" X 6-8" X 1" would finish up really nice for small work. WTH, $10 for 3 pieces. Planed off one Sunday AM and he was right - pretty wood. Decided a quick rout to make a free hand nut tray would work. Only carbide straight bit I had was a ?? old 1/2 incher from Sears. Not burned - but. Results of free hand rout are at http://web2.airmail.net/xleanone/index.html/Tray/ The images are 250 - 400 KB, so if you're on dial up you may want to pass. Last 2 pics are bottom of tray, just planed. All wiped with mineral spirits to show figure, color balance adjusted to 5250 to reduce flash effect. All the cut sides are burned pretty badly.Bad technique and maybe a questionable bit. BTW, the wood is really pretty. Big Leaf maple and great figure, but boy, what a PITA to plane! Ron Knight has my 50 degree smoother on order (at 1/2 price!) for this kind of stuff! Any suggestions appreciated. Regards. Tom |
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