Sparktrician
Member
- Joined
- Dec 4, 2009
- Messages
- 4,606
This morning I took a piece of maple that I wanted to reduce into a fence for my drill press. I'd already cut one edge and used the RO125 to get rid of rough planing marks on the broad sides with good success. I wanted to joint one edge to use as a reference for further reductions later by using the OF2200 with a straight bit. I set up the OF2200 with the straight bit. I needed two guide rails, and set them up with the connectors. The router took off about 1/16", so it wasn't a tough cut, and there was no torquing of the guide rails, yet the edge wasn't as smooth as I would have anticipated, in that there were some dings and what could be called sniping.
Lesson #1 - Be sure that when the guide rails are connected, they are absolutely in line before locking down the screws on the connectors. I used a 56" extruded straightedge to check then, and found that they were not dead on the money, then adjusted them to be dead in line.
Lesson #2 - Be sure that you run the parallel edge guide over the joint between guide rail sections to be sure that there are no misalignments to cause skipping or catching.
Lesson #3 - Be sure that the adjusting screws in the parallel edge guide have taken all the slack out and that there is no play to let the router wander.
Lesson #4 - Be sure that the guide rails are brushed clean between passes to eliminate any chance of debris changing the trajectory of the router.
I still didn't get the clean cut I was looking for, and don't know why. The bit is a new, clean and sharp Whiteside bit; the guide rail is dead straight, there's no slack in the parallel edge guide; the guide rails were swept clean between passes. Yet, I still kept getting the sniping periodically. I talked to Bob Marino at length about the issue (thanks for your time, Bob), and we came to the conclusion that I was doing things right, yet I kept getting the sniping. I tried shifting to the MFK700, but without good results, and I'll have to admit that I was the problem, not the MFK700. Finally, I went back to the TS55 and got the smooth cut I'd been hoping to get with the OF2200.
Here are a few photos of the kind of sniping that I was getting, and of the bit I was using. You can see the wear pattern on both cutting edges on the bit to see that the depth of cut was pretty negligible, and that the edge isn't dinged. Anybody have any ideas as to why I keep getting the sniping?
Lesson #1 - Be sure that when the guide rails are connected, they are absolutely in line before locking down the screws on the connectors. I used a 56" extruded straightedge to check then, and found that they were not dead on the money, then adjusted them to be dead in line.
Lesson #2 - Be sure that you run the parallel edge guide over the joint between guide rail sections to be sure that there are no misalignments to cause skipping or catching.
Lesson #3 - Be sure that the adjusting screws in the parallel edge guide have taken all the slack out and that there is no play to let the router wander.
Lesson #4 - Be sure that the guide rails are brushed clean between passes to eliminate any chance of debris changing the trajectory of the router.
I still didn't get the clean cut I was looking for, and don't know why. The bit is a new, clean and sharp Whiteside bit; the guide rail is dead straight, there's no slack in the parallel edge guide; the guide rails were swept clean between passes. Yet, I still kept getting the sniping periodically. I talked to Bob Marino at length about the issue (thanks for your time, Bob), and we came to the conclusion that I was doing things right, yet I kept getting the sniping. I tried shifting to the MFK700, but without good results, and I'll have to admit that I was the problem, not the MFK700. Finally, I went back to the TS55 and got the smooth cut I'd been hoping to get with the OF2200.
Here are a few photos of the kind of sniping that I was getting, and of the bit I was using. You can see the wear pattern on both cutting edges on the bit to see that the depth of cut was pretty negligible, and that the edge isn't dinged. Anybody have any ideas as to why I keep getting the sniping?