bamboo and routers...i want them to play nice
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careful around the tips normal cutting? or careful when climb cutting?
jellyfish:
I do the same - brass bushing and 1/4 inch straight router bit.
Use my base material template so it creates about a 4mm offset that covers the edges plus 2mm overhang.
I have still had some tear-out going around the tips (cutting in the normal direction, handheld router not a table) and occasionally along the sidecut - I think especially when you strike a join in the laminates at just the right angle and the router bit tries to burrow inbetween the laminated layers.
jellyfish:
I do the same - brass bushing and 1/4 inch straight router bit.
Use my base material template so it creates about a 4mm offset that covers the edges plus 2mm overhang.
I have still had some tear-out going around the tips (cutting in the normal direction, handheld router not a table) and occasionally along the sidecut - I think especially when you strike a join in the laminates at just the right angle and the router bit tries to burrow inbetween the laminated layers.
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you referring to cutting the shape(sidecut and tips) or the profile?
If its the shape, its cuz your bit is smacking the grains and ripping them apart, any bit will do this to some degree.
Go "forward" with your cut (cutting counter-clockwise around the board if looking down upon it) until you get to the very tip, stop. Go and do the same to the other side starting at the rail and moving to the tip and come off at the tip. You should have done all but the two opposing corners in upper left and lower right, cut these corners backwards or clockwise, climb cutting like others have mentioned. You'll still probably chip here or there but it shouldnt' take massive chunks any more.
Right you're using template with fixed router. Just cut the parts you're having trouble with in the opposite direction, should reduce the problem.
If its the shape, its cuz your bit is smacking the grains and ripping them apart, any bit will do this to some degree.
Go "forward" with your cut (cutting counter-clockwise around the board if looking down upon it) until you get to the very tip, stop. Go and do the same to the other side starting at the rail and moving to the tip and come off at the tip. You should have done all but the two opposing corners in upper left and lower right, cut these corners backwards or clockwise, climb cutting like others have mentioned. You'll still probably chip here or there but it shouldnt' take massive chunks any more.
Right you're using template with fixed router. Just cut the parts you're having trouble with in the opposite direction, should reduce the problem.
Doug
Another thing I found very useful to avoid this chipping is to pre-cut the core on a bandsaw (or jigsaw). I just trace the contour of the template on my "square" core with a sharpie, then cut it on the bandsaw leaving as little wood as I can to be cut with the router... It's not that time consuming and I found I can go ways faster with the router next.
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