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-   -   Any one know of a circle cutting jig for bandsaw, or table saw? (https://www.diybanter.com/woodworking/123436-any-one-know-circle-cutting-jig-bandsaw-table-saw.html)

CODGE October 4th 05 01:50 AM

Any one know of a circle cutting jig for bandsaw, or table saw?
 
I need to cut a two-foot circle in oak. Any help is much appreciated. TIA
Codge

Steve Peterson October 4th 05 01:59 AM

DAGS "Trammel Arm"
"CODGE" wrote in message
...
I need to cut a two-foot circle in oak. Any help is much appreciated. TIA
Codge




Tom October 4th 05 02:01 AM

Use a plung router with a circle cutting jig.
Much cleaner cut than a bandsaw.

See this link
http://www.woodworkingtips.com/etips/etip102000sn.html


"CODGE" wrote in message
...
I need to cut a two-foot circle in oak. Any help is much appreciated. TIA
Codge




David October 4th 05 02:05 AM

Tom wrote:

Use a plung router with a circle cutting jig.
Much cleaner cut than a bandsaw.

See this link
http://www.woodworkingtips.com/etips/etip102000sn.html


"CODGE" wrote in message
...

I need to cut a two-foot circle in oak. Any help is much appreciated. TIA
Codge




I thought the router was for cleaning up after cutting out the circle on
a BS.

Dave

Andy October 4th 05 02:15 AM

I sure can't picture a safe way to cut a circle with a tablesaw, but if
you have a good jigsaw, you can get or make a jig for that, and it will
come out almost as clean as a router. Can be as simple as a small flat
aluminum bar nailed to the center of the circle and connected to your
jigsaw. Router with a circle-cutting jig would be a great way to clean
up after a freehand bandsaw or jigsaw cut. Wood magazine just had
plans for an easy, cheap, expandable router circle jig - essentially
make an offset sub-base out of 1/2" ply with an arm coming off one
side, and carefully measure distances from the edge of your router bit
to a hole on the arm for the center of your circle. Does that make
sense? Easier done than written - basically make a
squash-raquet-shaped piece of plywood, with the 'head' the same size as
your router base, and put holes in the 'handle'.
Good luck,
Andy


Bruce Barnett October 4th 05 03:44 AM

"Andy" writes:

I sure can't picture a safe way to cut a circle with a tablesaw,


Hmm. Fixed wooden platform with pin 2 feet from the tablesaw edge.
Rotate wood on top, and the edge moves towards blade.
There was a jig like this in Tolpin's book on tablesaws.

I would have something on top to prevent flyoff.
But your hands would be 1 1/2 feet away from the saw.

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BillyBob October 4th 05 11:06 AM


"David" wrote in message
...

I thought the router was for cleaning up after cutting out the circle on
a BS.


Heck no. You can cut clean circles with a router all day long. All it takes
is a piece of plywood bolted to the base of the router with a nail for the
center of the circle. Of course there are fancy factory made jigs and
fixtures but they don't perform the function any better. I've heard of
someone doing a large doorway arch by laying it out in a parking lot and
using a router. The key to using the router is making multiple passes. The
result is cleaner than any saw can do.

Bob



Swingman October 4th 05 12:11 PM

"Andy" wrote in message

I sure can't picture a safe way to cut a circle with a tablesaw


Quite possible and there are circle cutting jig designs specifically for the
table saw ... but, IME, you have to rough cut the circle first, and it takes
a few passes and lots of futzing to get it done. You do get a very clean
cut, however.

In my little part of the woodworking world a router and trammel is much
preferred over other methods. It is just too easy to make a trammel router
base out of 1/4" sheet stock for any router.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 9/17/05






George October 4th 05 12:22 PM


"Bruce Barnett" wrote in message
...
"Andy" writes:

I sure can't picture a safe way to cut a circle with a tablesaw,


Hmm. Fixed wooden platform with pin 2 feet from the tablesaw edge.
Rotate wood on top, and the edge moves towards blade.
There was a jig like this in Tolpin's book on tablesaws.


If he's got a bandsaw, it's hands down the best choice.

http://www.mikescomputerinfo.com/circlejig.htm which requires some
imagination, or perhaps a look at this excessively elaborate pay-to-play
http://www.plansnow.com/bandsaw.html

Of course Norm built one on TV, too.

A trip to the paper book place should turn plans in most standard texts,
though Duginskie's is the one I'd buy or read.

If you like routers, you can move the router with trammels
http://www.woodworkingtips.com/etips/etip102000sn.html

Or mount your pivot and leave the router in the table. Recommend spiral
bits to help out over the splinter-prone uphill parts.



Lawrence Wasserman October 4th 05 04:02 PM

In article ,
CODGE wrote:
I need to cut a two-foot circle in oak. Any help is much appreciated. TIA
Codge


Cut a square from your stock on the table saw so that its side is
slightly longer than the diameter of your circle.

Then use a single-runner table saw cut-off sled that is at least slightly
wider than the radius of your circle. Assuming the runner rides in the
left miter gauge slot, the right end of the sled should end right at the
blade. Roughly in the middle of the sled from front to back, measure
from right edge over to the left the radius of the circle and mark the
spot. Find the center of the square you cut (By intersecting diagonals
the corners is an easy way) and drill a small hole there. Using a screw
that fits snugly in the hole but turns freely, screw the square to
the sled at the marked spot. the screw shold not bind the square from
pivoting. Raise the blade and cut the corners off the square by running
the sled & square through the saw blade. You may want to cut the
corners again from the resulting octagon. Now, with the saw running,
slowly move the sled towards the blade until the blade just starts
nibbling on the underside of the workpiece, and start rotating. After
a full turn, move the sled slightly forward again, and repeat until
the circle is completely cut.

I have used this method (Which I believe I first saw in one of
Cristofero's books) many times and it is safe and makes a perfect
circle that requires very little if any sanding. After the first few
cuts you will quickly get a feel for how much you can advance the sled
for each rotation.


--

Larry Wasserman Baltimore, Maryland



mac davis October 4th 05 04:41 PM

On Tue, 04 Oct 2005 10:06:39 GMT, "BillyBob"
wrote:


"David" wrote in message
...

I thought the router was for cleaning up after cutting out the circle on
a BS.


Heck no. You can cut clean circles with a router all day long. All it takes
is a piece of plywood bolted to the base of the router with a nail for the
center of the circle. Of course there are fancy factory made jigs and
fixtures but they don't perform the function any better. I've heard of
someone doing a large doorway arch by laying it out in a parking lot and
using a router. The key to using the router is making multiple passes. The
result is cleaner than any saw can do.

Bob

I went way cheaper...lol
I use a pegboard scrap, about 6" x 14" long, with the router stuck on the
pegboard with double sided tape and a short sheet metal screw as the pivot..
Almost any size circle is possible, just pick the hole for the pivot point that
works, put a straight bit in the router and set it for whatever first cut depth
that you're comfortable with... then just set for more depth and run the circle
again until cut..

I threw it together when I needed a round top for a 50 gallon drum for my DC...
worked so well that I kept it as a "jig" and hung it on the wall...


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

BillyBob October 4th 05 05:51 PM


"mac davis" wrote in message
...

I went way cheaper...lol
I use a pegboard scrap, about 6" x 14" long,


Now that's getting cheap! My first large circle jig came from a source with
history. In 1980, I bought some 3/8" exterior plywood to board up my windows
for a hurricane. I kept those boards in the attic for years. I finally cut
off a piece to make a quick and dirty router circle jig. I think, figuring
time value of money, this jig was virtually free.

Our mutual point is that cutting precision circles with a router does not
take any precision at all in equipment.

Bob



October 4th 05 10:21 PM

On Tue, 04 Oct 2005 00:50:36 GMT, CODGE wrote:

I need to cut a two-foot circle in oak. Any help is much appreciated. TIA
Codge



Check out:

http://home.earthlink.net/~kvaughn65/jigs.html - Pin in sliding
piece of wood to turn circle about.

HTH
Bill


CW October 5th 05 02:00 AM


"George" George@least wrote in message
...

"Bruce Barnett" wrote in message
...
"Andy" writes:

I sure can't picture a safe way to cut a circle with a tablesaw,


Hmm. Fixed wooden platform with pin 2 feet from the tablesaw edge.
Rotate wood on top, and the edge moves towards blade.
There was a jig like this in Tolpin's book on tablesaws.


If he's got a bandsaw, it's hands down the best choice.


Next to the router, that is.





Bruce Barnett October 5th 05 12:56 PM

"CW" writes:

If he's got a bandsaw, it's hands down the best choice.


Next to the router, that is.


And the Binford CircleMaster 7700 - if you can find one.

--
Sending unsolicited commercial e-mail to this account incurs a fee of
$500 per message, and acknowledges the legality of this contract.

mac davis October 5th 05 04:45 PM

On Tue, 04 Oct 2005 17:21:23 -0400, wrote:

On Tue, 04 Oct 2005 00:50:36 GMT, CODGE wrote:

I need to cut a two-foot circle in oak. Any help is much appreciated. TIA
Codge



Check out:

http://home.earthlink.net/~kvaughn65/jigs.html - Pin in sliding
piece of wood to turn circle about.

HTH
Bill


Leave it to Ken to come up with a simple solution and then build it nicer than I
build cabinets.. *g*

(I wanna be like Ken when/if I grow up)



mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

[email protected] October 5th 05 08:19 PM

I had a job cutting circles out of plastic for museum displays. most of
them were 5 to 10 inches or so in diameter. the tolerance was (IIRC)
..005". (five thousandths of an inch). I used a jig that took me maybe
15 minutes to build and produced circles that consistently measured
within .002" of spec. basically a router trammel with an adjustment
mechanism. easy, cheap and accurate.



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