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#1
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Suggestions using Jatoba/Brazilian Cherry and planner
I need some suggestions on how to keep Jatoba from slipping in my Dewalt
735 with new blades. I have set the cutter to remove only slight cut each time but I still need to push it hard going into and pull the boards out. The board is about 9" wide and 1" thick. It appears to be slipping on the rollers more then slowing down on the cutter. Should I try snow chains on the rollers or is there something I'm missing. The planner is around 6 months old. Thanks for the help ps This is the first time I have gotten any Jatoba and didn't realize it was hard as steel. |
#2
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Suggestions using Jatoba/Brazilian Cherry and planner
On Fri, 29 Sep 2006 21:23:46 -0400, Keith wrote:
I need some suggestions on how to keep Jatoba from slipping in my Dewalt 735 with new blades. I have set the cutter to remove only slight cut each time but I still need to push it hard going into and pull the boards out. The board is about 9" wide and 1" thick. It appears to be slipping on the rollers more then slowing down on the cutter. Should I try snow chains on the rollers or is there something I'm missing. The planner is around 6 months old. Thanks for the help ps This is the first time I have gotten any Jatoba and didn't realize it was hard as steel. Norm Nowrecki had been sitting at his desk for six months, waiting for the latest James Krenov book to be published that would give meaning and purpose to his life, when his cell phone peeped out a tinny version of the NYW theme, signaling an incoming call. This came as quite a shock to Norm, as he had not paid his cell phone bill for three months, having spent all his money on a particularly attractive investment in Jatoba, well it wasn't - look, we'll come back to that. Norm peeled the much duct taped Motorola from his belt, banged it reflexively on the desktop and spoke, "Norm Nowrecki, Troll Tracker." The line was full of weird clicks and unintelligible disembodied voices, added to the electronic howling of distant modem handshakes, it seemed as though dozens of crossed lines were feeding into his ancient Motorola. A wheezing sepulcharal presence spoke above the racket, "SMEGMA." The line went dead. Horrified, Norm punched in *69. Nothing, nada, zippo. The unfunded Motorola was mute. Could it be true? Was his old nemesis again up to its vile tricks? SMEGMA (Silly Morons Engaged in Generating Malicious Assaults) was thought to have been disbanded after Norm's last attack on their headquarters, where Norm had captured their leader (Fetus Fudgepacker) and subjected him to his patented Mobius Looped PowerPoint Presentation of Hoadley's, Identifying Wood, with a background track of a MIDI version of TOH bumper music. Norm thought of it as, "The Cure." "Fudgepacker must have escaped" Breathed Norm to the fetid, uncomprehending air of his office. Norm looked at the frosted glass of his office door and read the inscription, "rekcarT llorT - ikcerwoN mroN", which made him chortle as he thought of Firesign Theatre, which made him guffaw as he... "Get a grip. You've got a case." It's probably time to deal with the Jatoba Incident. Norm had two passions, computers and wooddorking. He'd found his calling in the marriage of the two during the great Crossposting Doggie Doo Troll War, in which he had succeeded in neutering the Doggies and in cancel ling all of the accounts that the Trolls had posted from. He'd been well compensated for his efforts by grateful members of the afflicted groups and his lifestyle had blossomed to the point where he could afford a girlfriend, every other Friday night, for about a half an hour. Life was good. Then he'd had that tremendous success in bringing Fetus Fudgepacker to bay, actually to Ebay, where Norm dangled the indescribable carrot that became the ineluctable trap. Norm had offered for auction the unmunged email addresses of those on the group that Fudgepacker considered to be his particular prey. Norm was able to increase his time with his intermittent girlfriend to forty five minutes, based on the resolution of that case. Life was better than good. One night shortly after, while Norm was wandering the docks in an attempt to catch the scent of the forbidden South American Hardwoods, that he knew to be nestled in the shipping containers of certain flag of convenience vessels, he came upon a small man wearing a large coat. "Brazilian Cherry, Honduran Mahogany, Jatoba.", hawked the little man in the large coat. "Did you say, Jatoba?", growled Norm, backing the little man against a dock post. The little man was flapping his coat open and closed, like a fishing bird drying his feathers, like a rooster greeting the dawn, like a...well, he mostly looked like a somewhat hesitant flasher. "What's this about Jatoba?", barked Norm to the little flashing man. "Check it out.", smarmed the little flashing man, as he opened his coat to reveal a collection of wood samples, sewn into his coat lining, that would have held, in a more sober culture, a transient's display of offshore Rolex knockoffs. "Jatoba, in the bole, kiln dried, all FAS." Norm's head was spinning. "How much?" "A dollar two ninety eight a board foot." Norm broke out in a sweat, knowing that he had only enough money to pay for his cell phone and the 56K line that fed his business. He lifted the little flashing man four inches off of the ground and, breathing the remains of his sardine poor boy sandwich into the little flashing man's face, said, "I want all of it." That transaction had sealed Norm's fate. He lost his access to his intermittent girlfriend. His Motorola was numbed into silence. He was able to keep up his troll tracking business only by tapping into the phone line of the office next door to his. He'd hit bottom. Norm was a wood junky. The heavy breather who'd pronounced the word, "SMEGMA" into his heretofore dead Motorola, held out the only promise of redemption. He was on the case. In his excitement and in the anticipaaaaation of the hunt, Norm had a double epiphany - it was Fudgepacker - it was always Fudgepacker - the voice on the phone - the little flashing man... "Aaarrrrgggghhhhhh." Norm fired up his trusty 133mhz beige nonamebox, engaged his balky winmodem... The chase was on. (to be continued) Regards, Tom Watson tjwatson1ATcomcastDOTnet (real email) http://home.comcast.net/~tjwatson1/ |
#3
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Suggestions using Jatoba/Brazilian Cherry and planner
Keith wrote: I need some suggestions on how to keep Jatoba from slipping in my Dewalt 735 with new blades. I have set the cutter to remove only slight cut each time but I still need to push it hard going into and pull the boards out. The board is about 9" wide and 1" thick. It appears to be slipping on the rollers more then slowing down on the cutter. Should I try snow chains on the rollers or is there something I'm missing. The planner is around 6 months old. Thanks for the help ps This is the first time I have gotten any Jatoba and didn't realize it was hard as steel. Keith, Try waxing the bed of the planer and see if that helps. Good Luck. Ronnie |
#4
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Suggestions using Jatoba/Brazilian Cherry and planner
"Keith" wrote in message ... I need some suggestions on how to keep Jatoba from slipping in my Dewalt 735 with new blades. I have set the cutter to remove only slight cut each time but I still need to push it hard going into and pull the boards out. The board is about 9" wide and 1" thick. It appears to be slipping on the rollers more then slowing down on the cutter. Should I try snow chains on the rollers or is there something I'm missing. The planner is around 6 months old. Thanks for the help ps This is the first time I have gotten any Jatoba and didn't realize it was hard as steel. Clean the infeed and out feed rollers with an appropriate cleaner, acetone usually works nicely, and put TopCote or wax on the table surface. |
#5
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Suggestions using Jatoba/Brazilian Cherry and planner
Keith wrote:
I need some suggestions on how to keep Jatoba from slipping in my Dewalt 735 with new blades. I have set the cutter to remove only slight cut each time but I still need to push it hard going into and pull the boards out. The board is about 9" wide and 1" thick. It appears to be slipping on the rollers more then slowing down on the cutter. Should I try snow chains on the rollers or is there something I'm missing. The planner is around 6 months old. Thanks for the help ps This is the first time I have gotten any Jatoba and didn't realize it was hard as steel. I don't know if this applies to the DeWalt 735 or not but seeing as you stated "new blades" I thought I'd mention my recent experience with my 733. I changed the blades last week without consulting the manual. After changing the blades the stock wasn't feeding through the planer properly. I quick check of the user manual showed that when I positioned the magnetic holders for setting the blade height I used them upside down resulting in the blades being set slightly higher than they should have been causing the slippage. Resetting the blade height with the magnetic holder positioned properly solved the problem. -- Jack Novak Buffalo, NY - USA |
#6
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Suggestions using Jatoba/Brazilian Cherry and planner
I'd be careful with the acetone. It dissolves most synthetics.
"Leon" wrote in message et... "Keith" wrote in message ... I need some suggestions on how to keep Jatoba from slipping in my Dewalt 735 with new blades. I have set the cutter to remove only slight cut each time but I still need to push it hard going into and pull the boards out. The board is about 9" wide and 1" thick. It appears to be slipping on the rollers more then slowing down on the cutter. Should I try snow chains on the rollers or is there something I'm missing. The planner is around 6 months old. Thanks for the help ps This is the first time I have gotten any Jatoba and didn't realize it was hard as steel. Clean the infeed and out feed rollers with an appropriate cleaner, acetone usually works nicely, and put TopCote or wax on the table surface. |
#7
Posted to rec.woodworking
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Suggestions using Jatoba/Brazilian Cherry and planner
Thanks for the suggestions and I did wax the table and clean the rollers and it
does work MUCH better. I don't think about waxing the planner table when I do the tablesaw,bandsaw and joiner. Nova wrote: Keith wrote: I need some suggestions on how to keep Jatoba from slipping in my Dewalt 735 with new blades. I have set the cutter to remove only slight cut each time but I still need to push it hard going into and pull the boards out. The board is about 9" wide and 1" thick. It appears to be slipping on the rollers more then slowing down on the cutter. Should I try snow chains on the rollers or is there something I'm missing. The planner is around 6 months old. Thanks for the help ps This is the first time I have gotten any Jatoba and didn't realize it was hard as steel. I don't know if this applies to the DeWalt 735 or not but seeing as you stated "new blades" I thought I'd mention my recent experience with my 733. I changed the blades last week without consulting the manual. After changing the blades the stock wasn't feeding through the planer properly. I quick check of the user manual showed that when I positioned the magnetic holders for setting the blade height I used them upside down resulting in the blades being set slightly higher than they should have been causing the slippage. Resetting the blade height with the magnetic holder positioned properly solved the problem. |
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