I didn't use a router because I hate MDF dust I saw a lot of picutres where people are doing exactly the same thing with a bandsaw so I thought it would also work with a jig saw. I finally cut all the 32 circles without an accident
Got 50m sanding paper on a roll yesterday. I think I have nearly everything to builld the thickness sander. I have built the first part of the frame today.
I am concernd if the core will stay in the planer (sander ;-)) crib because they are no rollers to push the material down in a thickness sander. Any ideas for simple DIY rollers? Or will the sanding drum push the core down...?
Cheers Christoph
PS: 100 points for all who have understood my gibberish.
you wont need rollers if you screw the core down against a nice flat and solid crib
i ve built some basic rollers with steel rods, skatebearings in a plywood case and spings from a desk lamp: viewtopic.php?p=23318#23318
good luck
see the 3rd pic top-down at the link i 've posted above
the sandpaper's end goes through a slit cut at the drum's edge
then it is secured with a small beech wedge at the underside
kiteboards are wide, get the lowest grid you can
i use a 36 al ox for woodwork
is your core's outline inspired from 2010 North boards?
looking great, keep updating
Thanks for the help. My new shop is indeed really nice and just 10 meters away from the living room. Sometimes I think I am dreaming...
Is there a way to change the rotating direction of the motor. It is a normal 230V motor with 3 pins. Now the drum is pulling the wood inwards an this is very dangerous... (yes, I could feed it from the other side)
Jibber wrote:
Is there a way to change the rotating direction of the motor. It is a normal 230V motor with 3 pins. Now the drum is pulling the wood inwards an this is very dangerous... (yes, I could feed it from the other side)
Cheers, Christoph
If it's a 1-phase AC motor - no. Mount it on the other side.
For 3-phase motors - switch two of the phases.
This is echoes from my pre, pre, previous career. Things might have happened....
If it's a 1-phase AC motor - no. Mount it on the other side.
For 3-phase motors - switch two of the phases.
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Not necessarily true. A lot of single phase 230v motors are reversible. Are you sure that all you have is 3 wires? You may have more than that and they are crimped or nutted together.
Not necessarily true. A lot of single phase 230v motors are reversible. Are you sure that all you have is 3 wires? You may have more than that and they are crimped or nutted together.