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toller
 
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Default Typical of dado sets (or is mine not so good)?

I bought a Freud S208 on eBay for $74.

I used it last week to cut some 3/4" dados in butternut. It was perfect.

Today I did some 5/16" in red oak. The bottom was uneven (I used the 1/16"
cutter, last week I didn't; maybe it cuts high?) and there was serious
tearout on the ends.

This was my first time with a dado set; I have always used a router before.
Is it typical, or is the S208 just not ready for prime time? (or am I doing
something wrong?)

Thanks.


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patriarch
 
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"toller" wrote in
:

I bought a Freud S208 on eBay for $74.

I used it last week to cut some 3/4" dados in butternut. It was
perfect.

Today I did some 5/16" in red oak. The bottom was uneven (I used the
1/16" cutter, last week I didn't; maybe it cuts high?) and there was
serious tearout on the ends.


It may have been the red oak. It's not the most tool friendly of woods,
and is much more prone to tear out than butternut, or similarly, walnut.

If you have a scrap of that butternut around, try the same setup on that.

There's always the router method. Or you could neander the dado...

Patriarch
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patriarch
 
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"toller" wrote in
:

I bought a Freud S208 on eBay for $74.

I used it last week to cut some 3/4" dados in butternut. It was
perfect.

Today I did some 5/16" in red oak. The bottom was uneven (I used the
1/16" cutter, last week I didn't; maybe it cuts high?) and there was
serious tearout on the ends.

This was my first time with a dado set; I have always used a router
before. Is it typical, or is the S208 just not ready for prime time?
(or am I doing something wrong?)

Thanks.




I just had another thought...

DAMHIKT, but if one were to inadvertantly swap the right and left blades in
the SD208 set, a really sorry-@$$ dado is the result. Hypothetically
speaking, of course.

And no self-respecting wooddorker would ever do this, you understand. At
least not intentionally.

But the arrows are on the side for a reason. Or so I have been led to
believe.

Patriarch
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toller
 
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Thank you for mentioning it, though it isn't the problem.

Years ago I sold 3,500 door viewers to a college. They called a few weeks
later to say they had installed them, but they were defective; they could
see the inside of the room clearly. I told him I would get back to him.

I checked our viewers and found that while you could see into the room, it
was a dim fuzzy view of a small area; certainly not a problem. I was
telling someone about this and happened to say that it was like he had
installed them backwards. Hearing myself say it....

I called him back and explained which end faced out. He said that was
ridiculous but would get back to me. I never heard from him again.

He had installed 3,500 doorviewers backwards. So, having the blades in
backwards is not so impossible.


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TWS
 
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Default

On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 05:53:41 GMT, patriarch
wrote:

I just had another thought...

DAMHIKT, but if one were to inadvertantly swap the right and left blades in
the SD208 set, a really sorry-@$$ dado is the result. Hypothetically
speaking, of course.

And no self-respecting wooddorker would ever do this, you understand. At
least not intentionally.

But the arrows are on the side for a reason. Or so I have been led to
believe.

Patriarch

Of course if you clean your dado blades with Simple Green the markings
on the Freud blades comes off and then you don't know which is the
outside unless you pay attention to the tooth angle.

But, as you say, everyone would pay attention to this ;-)

I wouldn't be surprised if OP's set had been resharpened on all the
blades but the 1/16 chipper.

TWS


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Lewis
 
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Default

you don't know which is the
outside unless you pay attention to the tooth angle.

Hmmm... I've got a "no-name" dado set, and don't see any markings on
the blades to indicate which is which. How can I tell from the tooth
angle?
Thanks,
Lewis
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