Steve Jones
Member
- Joined
- Dec 23, 2007
- Messages
- 405
fshanno said:Another question. Looks like you have thin rips pretty much solved. Are you ripping and cross cutting you face frames and door and drawer parts on this table as well? If so how is it handling hardwoods.
Final question. What about the other axis? I'm going to need rips probably up to the full 8' in some cases. It would be nice to be able to keep the pencil in my pocket and handle that with ruled stops as well.
Thin rips are covered easily by the right hand stop, There is much discussion about getting thin rips from thin stock - use bigger pieces guys!
Frankly i used to rip the frames (not so much face frame work, I usually talk the customer out of it, I pretty much detest all the hinges I have seen that work with face frames, as far as I'm concerned it's an outmoded way of making cabinets inefficiently, you can get away with bad cabinets and doors and bang the hinges around to align them, tacky!
i do however usually make 5-piece doors, these days I get my rail and stile stock already ripped, cut, squared and sanded, I simply cut to length and route the profiles. (shop around, this may be catching on in your area, so far i can buy Maple, Oak, and Mahogany all prepared this way from my lumber supplier at not much over the going board foot price. (you have to buy in bundles of 100 linear feet) sized in 3/4" x 2" or 3/4" x 2 1/2"
Other door and drawer parts (I use 1/2" ply for drawer parts) are cut on the table, sometimes norrower parts (shallow drawer sides and ends) are cut to length on the miter saw because I can set the stop, stack them and cut them 4 at a time.
For long cuts on sheet goods I use the table and a long rail, (stuff that fits in the sizes for the edge guide get cut that way) everything else I use shop made story stick to the widths I cut (for example I rip a lot of 11 1/4" strips for top cabinets,) story sticks are made in pairs each is an "L" shape with the leg very short to sit over the edge of the material, the top of the stick touches and pushes the top hat on the rail unit its perfectly in place, for a bunch of narrow rips at odd sizes I sometimes use the edge stops supplied with the 32 system kit.