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![]() I'm not sure if I understand the "bow side down". If you were to lay the board (on edge) on a flat table and see a gap in the middle, start your piece centered over the cutter and take a little off of one end then turn the piece around and take a little off the other end until you get the piece straight. If the bow is bad enough you may need to make one pass closer to the end and the another (on the same end) more towards the middle and repeat the same procedure on the other end. Make the final pass with the grain running in the correct direction after you've made the piece straight. If the problem is the other way where your board (on edge) will rock on a flat surface, start at one end and run to the middle of the piece, then turn the piece and run back to where your first cut stopped in the middle. Again, once the piece is straight, make your final pass with the grain running in the proper direction. If the piece is bowed (in either direction) you want to make the piece straight before you make full passes. Mike O. Thanks for the technique Mike, I will use it but I don't know about that chopping against the grain, one never knows how much will get chopped off. -- Alex - "newbie_neander" woodworker cravdraa_at-yahoo_dot-com not my site: http://www.e-sword.net/ |
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