rmwarren
Member
- Joined
- Jul 11, 2010
- Messages
- 3,063
I have been fiddling with different setups to come up with a way to easily and simply cut full sheets of plywood on an MFT. Yesterday I tested a setup on some ¼” ply panels.
The setup uses 80/20 extrusions and the guide rail clips developed for the Rip Dogs experiment. ½” pins mounted to the extrusion are used instead of the Rip Dogs to align the guide rail. The extrusions mount to the MFT from underneath with carriage bolts, spacers and knobs. The pins are attached to 2 short arms at 90 degrees to the main extrusion and the saw blade runs in the t-slot channel. There are a bunch of extrusions that can be moved or swiveled to support both sides to the panels being cut. It all breaks down in a few minutes; the longest piece is 52”. Here is the setup for ripping 8’ material:
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The basic setup uses a two-piece extrusion for ripping 96” and 1-piece for 48”, although I can cross-cut 48” using the 96” setup. By removing one half of the 2-piece main rail I can still cut 48” material. Cutting stock less than the rail width is easy and I can also set stops for repetitive cuts:
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In this last configuration I plan add ruler scales to the support extrusions for the stops, then butt them to the main extrusion to get a repeatable setup that will even work with narrow stock.
Overall it worked great with the ¼” ply, although I think the weight of the ply overhanging the MFT may be an issue if it were ½” or ¾”. Needs more testing, might need support legs for thicker ply.
RMW
The setup uses 80/20 extrusions and the guide rail clips developed for the Rip Dogs experiment. ½” pins mounted to the extrusion are used instead of the Rip Dogs to align the guide rail. The extrusions mount to the MFT from underneath with carriage bolts, spacers and knobs. The pins are attached to 2 short arms at 90 degrees to the main extrusion and the saw blade runs in the t-slot channel. There are a bunch of extrusions that can be moved or swiveled to support both sides to the panels being cut. It all breaks down in a few minutes; the longest piece is 52”. Here is the setup for ripping 8’ material:
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
The basic setup uses a two-piece extrusion for ripping 96” and 1-piece for 48”, although I can cross-cut 48” using the 96” setup. By removing one half of the 2-piece main rail I can still cut 48” material. Cutting stock less than the rail width is easy and I can also set stops for repetitive cuts:
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
[attachthumb=#]
In this last configuration I plan add ruler scales to the support extrusions for the stops, then butt them to the main extrusion to get a repeatable setup that will even work with narrow stock.
Overall it worked great with the ¼” ply, although I think the weight of the ply overhanging the MFT may be an issue if it were ½” or ¾”. Needs more testing, might need support legs for thicker ply.
RMW