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#1
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
Good day.
I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. Your suggestions will be greatly appricated. Thanks. |
#2
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
"newbee" wrote in message oups.com... Good day. I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. Your suggestions will be greatly appricated. Thanks. Shaper You mean without a shaper? I suppose all you could do would be to make a few angled cuts on the table saw and then try to sand it out. Make a template so you can see how you are doing. |
#3
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
You do not state how long the piece needs to be. If it is short enough to
fit in a lathe, then turning a 4x4 piece of wood is one way, then cutting this into quarters. If you need this to be long, one way is to get a 1.5in radius router bit. These are not cheap - $50 - $100 depending on brand. Route the radius on 2x stock and then cut off the radius edge. Another way would be to make several cuts on 2x stock at different angles, then use a curved spokeshave or scraper to get the final 1.5in radius and again cut off the radius edge. If you go this route, your wrists will thank you for using a spokeshave instead of scraper blade. Dave Paine "newbee" wrote in message oups.com... Good day. I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. Your suggestions will be greatly appricated. Thanks. |
#5
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
"newbee" wrote in message oups.com... Good day. I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. Your suggestions will be greatly appricated. Thanks. the old way would be to get it as close as possible with a table saw and then build yourself a modified spoke shave and basically scrape it to the right shape. this can work very well if you are any good with metal work. just a piece of flat iron and a grinder gets you most of the way to your scraper and then some precise sharpening with a file and some sandpaper. if you had a dowel the right size you could spray glue on some 400 grit sandpaper to that to make the final sharpen. otherwise go get the right router bit or shaper bit Doug |
#6
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
In article .com,
newbee wrote: Good day. I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. If you don't need any bends in it, Tape-ease sells 3" quarter round plywood and MDF. -- a href="http://www.poohsticks.org/drew/"Home Page/a In 1913 the inflation adjusted (in 2003 dollars) exemption for single people was $54,567, married couples' exemption $72,756, the next $363,783 was taxed at 1%, and earnings over $9,094,578 were taxed at the top rate of 7%. |
#7
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
"Doug Schultz" wrote in
news:3dJkf.37001$ki.20388@pd7tw2no: "newbee" wrote in message oups.com... Good day. I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. Your suggestions will be greatly appricated. Thanks. the old way would be to get it as close as possible with a table saw and then build yourself a modified spoke shave and basically scrape it to the right shape. this can work very well if you are any good with metal work. just a piece of flat iron and a grinder gets you most of the way to your scraper and then some precise sharpening with a file and some sandpaper. if you had a dowel the right size you could spray glue on some 400 grit sandpaper to that to make the final sharpen. otherwise go get the right router bit or shaper bit Doug Umm, If he had the right sized dowel for the final sharpening, couldn't he just cut that into quarters and skip all the metal fab stuff? ~Rob |
#8
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
"Rob Sluys" wrote in message
... "Doug Schultz" wrote in news:3dJkf.37001$ki.20388@pd7tw2no: Umm, If he had the right sized dowel for the final sharpening, couldn't he just cut that into quarters and skip all the metal fab stuff? ~Rob Yeah, duh, just hop down to HD and pick up a 6" diameter dowel. |
#9
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
"Rob Sluys" wrote in message ... "Doug Schultz" wrote in news:3dJkf.37001$ki.20388@pd7tw2no: "newbee" wrote in message oups.com... Good day. I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. Your suggestions will be greatly appricated. Thanks. the old way would be to get it as close as possible with a table saw and then build yourself a modified spoke shave and basically scrape it to the right shape. this can work very well if you are any good with metal work. just a piece of flat iron and a grinder gets you most of the way to your scraper and then some precise sharpening with a file and some sandpaper. if you had a dowel the right size you could spray glue on some 400 grit sandpaper to that to make the final sharpen. otherwise go get the right router bit or shaper bit Doug Umm, If he had the right sized dowel for the final sharpening, couldn't he just cut that into quarters and skip all the metal fab stuff? ~Rob Depends if he wants the roundover to be of the same material as the rest of the piece I suppose. Doug |
#10
Posted to rec.woodworking
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3" round over.
newbee wrote:
Good day. I was wondering if perhaps amy one would know, what would be the easiest way to make a 3" qtr round. Standard item if you can use 3/4", 13 ply, plywood formed in quarter circle. Standard length is 96". Various outer veneers are available. Lew |
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