fshanno said:
kosta said:
fshanno said:
I thought that's what the guided saw was made for, wasn't it? Even if you have a large jointer it may be good to make that first pass with the guided saw. One pass will make it straight guaranteed. Then you can make a thin pass on the jointer to finish up. I often get boards that are going to need to have 1/4 to a 1/2 taken off on the ends which would mean several passes on the jointer. Plus you can angle the guide to align that first edge with the grain. Plus if the board is a little twisted or bowed it usually doesn't matter because the guide will ride on it and still provide a square cut.
You can use a CS and a guide if the board is (S2S) Flat.
First step is to face joint the board.
Second step is to plane the board for easier edge jointing with a CS.
If the board is twisted or bowed the guide rides on the twisted board and the cut is out of square.
Your first step working with lumber is to establish one good side for the second step.
It's going to depend on the application. I'm cutting up lumber fast for kitchen cabinets. I think you're talking about something else.
I buy FAS - 8' long rough cut - random width hardwood lumber, not surfaced and not straight lined for built-in's.
You simple wouldn't buy a board of that description that was so badly twisted and/or bowed that the Festool guide and TS saw couldn't edge joint it. We'd just pass over it in the pile.
The Festool guide doesn't ride on such boards, it conforms to their shape. You could have up to an inch of deflection in bow or twist across the length of the board and the guide will conform nicely.
The TS55/75 on it's guide is an amazing tool. A CS is a great tool as well but there's a big difference.
If the board is good and flat we don't have to face joint.
If the board is bad ( twisted/ warped/ bowed ) we have to follow the steps:
A. Face joint.
B. Plane
C. Clean the edges with a CS and a guide rail.
For better edge glued boards we have to flip the boards.
About the flexing of the rails to conform with the waves of the board.
The flexing produces flex cuts. You will see that later when the boards have to be flattened for edge gluing.
This is why the face jointing comes first on bad boards.
If you don't have a jointer you can make a jig for your router and a large diameter bit or
you can use a hand planer to remove the high spots.