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#1
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to
set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. Sal |
#2
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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sal wrote:
I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. Sal I have no experience with the job, but I have a feeling a picture is worth a thousand words. I would suggest seeing if there is something on YouTube.com Good luck! Bill |
#3
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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sal wrote:
I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. For not much money you can get a routering mortise jig, probably at the box store. |
#4
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Hold on people I just realized I was lazy, googled and found a lot of info
also cheap mortise jigs so please ignore. Sal |
#5
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On Sun, 24 Jun 2012 16:53:41 -0500, "sal" wrote:
I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. Here you go, in januwine Chinglish! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OP26gvWDXoc And one in some kind of English: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IYReLwLucLE (His definition of "flush" differs from mine.) -- Always bear in mind that your own resolution to succeed is more important than any one thing. -- Abraham Lincoln |
#6
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On Jun 24, 5:53*pm, "sal" wrote:
I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. Sal Sharp scribing knife and an even sharper chisel. Rough to within 1/16" of the scribe line and pare to finish -- making the first chop at the line mashes it and spoils the fit. That last 1/16" pops off square, clean, and dead on the mark. |
#7
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Yep, and my router plane assures equal height in the mortise assuring a
flat plate. I like this thing. On 6/28/2012 5:52 PM, Father Haskell wrote: On Jun 24, 5:53 pm, "sal" wrote: I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. Sal Sharp scribing knife and an even sharper chisel. Rough to within 1/16" of the scribe line and pare to finish -- making the first chop at the line mashes it and spoils the fit. That last 1/16" pops off square, clean, and dead on the mark. |
#8
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Posted to rec.woodworking
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On 6/29/2012 10:04 AM, tiredofspam wrote:
Yep, and my router plane assures equal height in the mortise assuring a flat plate. I like this thing. On 6/28/2012 5:52 PM, Father Haskell wrote: On Jun 24, 5:53 pm, "sal" wrote: I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. Sal Sharp scribing knife and an even sharper chisel. Rough to within 1/16" of the scribe line and pare to finish -- making the first chop at the line mashes it and spoils the fit. That last 1/16" pops off square, clean, and dead on the mark. Router planes (like the Stanley 71 and 71-1/2) are wonderful tools. -- Free bad advice available here. To reply, eat the taco. http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/ |
#9
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On Jun 29, 12:07*pm, Steve Turner
wrote: On 6/29/2012 10:04 AM, tiredofspam wrote: Yep, and my router plane assures equal height in the mortise assuring a flat plate. I like this thing. On 6/28/2012 5:52 PM, Father Haskell wrote: On Jun 24, 5:53 pm, "sal" wrote: I would like to cut mortises in a door for hinges but have no Idea how to set up a router jig for that purpose.Could someone start me on the right track? I have used a chisel before to do the job but the results are not good. Sal Sharp scribing knife and an even sharper chisel. *Rough to within 1/16" of the scribe line and pare to finish -- making the first chop at the line mashes it and spoils the fit. *That last 1/16" pops off square, clean, and dead on the mark. Router planes (like the Stanley 71 and 71-1/2) are wonderful tools. Easier to fine tune the cutter depth than a tailed router. |
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