Bob Marino
Member
- Joined
- Jan 16, 2007
- Messages
- 3,263
Rey,
Great job. Thanks for posting.
Bob
Great job. Thanks for posting.
Bob
Per Swenson said:In this corner, from Pittsburgh Pennsylvaaaaanyaaaa!
I just wanted to make sure everyone knows you qualify in the location dept.
John Langevin said:A couple of quick questions: How do you join the MFT1080 to the 800 since they are of differing widths? With the tap method you used for both the dado and the cove, you locate the starting edge of the cut and set the storyboard to the desired end of the cut and simply advance the cut piece with a tap without picking up the rail?
Don T said:Rey do think this could be put into a PDF format so that it can be down loaded and saved?
Bob Marino said:Great job. Thanks for posting.
Bob
rjfarel said:Do you make a new storyboard each time you are cutting from stock of differing thickness, or have you have made several of standard thicknesses, or do you shim an existing storyboard for thicker stock?
Eiji Fuller said:Tis such an excellent tutorial. This and other tutorials are excellent resources for our members. So much so that I request that a new board under the title of "Tutorials" be started. What do you think, Matthew? I think that the "How to" board has alot of these but they are also mixed with many "how to" questions.
I think that it would be easier to reference these threads if they were all in the same location.
Some good examples of these would be:
Brice's LR32
Overtime's EuroCabinets 101
Mirko's LR32jig
Qwas MFT enhancements
Many more
Eiji Fuller
b_m_hart said:This is something that I've wished for, but hadn't bothered to actually say it out loud. Duh! This would be so very useful to newbies like myself, and from the sound of it, some of the pros around here might get a little something out of them too...
Rey Johnson said:- Introduction
- The Storyboard
- Narrow Cross Cuts
- Dadoes/Grooves/Rebates
- Coves
- Laps (half and cross)
- Tongues
- Closing Thoughts
Rey Johnson said:(**Note from earlier: A provision needs to be made to account for the width of the saw blade when setting up the spacing of the end of the storyboard and the fence stop. I use 3/32" to account for the width of the saw blade for certain cutting operations. This simply means that I tap the story three ticks left or right after I have measured).
John Stevens said:Rey Johnson said:(**Note from earlier: A provision needs to be made to account for the width of the saw blade when setting up the spacing of the end of the storyboard and the fence stop. I use 3/32" to account for the width of the saw blade for certain cutting operations. This simply means that I tap the story three ticks left or right after I have measured).
Hi, Rey. Just stopped by, and there isn't much I can add in the way of praise that hasn't already been said. I'm truly in your debt, because cove cuts are one of the only things I keep my table saw for anymore. This may be the end of the road for the TS.
FWIW, here's a suggestion that could be used for measurement in this and similar operations in which one piece has to fit inside another. Take a scrap piece from the same "male" that's going to be fit inside the "female" piece. Make a cut width-wise through that scrap piece. Take the pieces you just cut and press them together again along the kerf line. After the cut its width = original width minus saw kerf--just the dimension you want for setting the stop flag on the "rubber" side of the guide rail. Add a playing card or a few pieces of paper to the piece of scrap to give a little "breathing room." Hope this is clear without pics.
Regards,
John
Gene Howerton said:Rey, I really enjoyed the article but could you tell me where you purchased the measuring tape for the story board? I can't seem to find one that reads both right and left with a zero point. Thanks
Gene
BC6738F5BCE98B4 said:Let me join others in expressing their appreciation for your retrospective note. I have downloaded the .pdf version and will shortly have a color copy made at my local UPS or Kinko store (It is much cheaper than for me to buy a good color printer). I have three silly questions...