hitandruntz
Member
- Joined
- Jan 20, 2013
- Messages
- 106
I'm new to festool but not to carpentry. I used to be an independent trim contractor building and installing all my own product. Now I'm a union millworker working with ultra high end outfits as an installer. I got my first festools in January and put them right to work. overall I'm very happy with them and the very generous Festool community here on FOG. to get my feet wet with the tools I chose a couple of projects that would allow me to use the full arsenal of the festools Ive acquired.
First project I built were 2 home made sysports out of melamine. nothing complicated. I was very careful during the ripping process.I would rip a quarter off one length of the sheet as a starting point, then measuring both sides then clamping and then checking again and then ripping. I repeated this process 3 times. after my rips I measured the ends of the boards and they were on the $. at this point I'm really happy and everything is pretty straight forward as it should be. next I routed a 1/4" dado referencing off the back edge with the edge guide and I'm really enjoying working with the festools. I pulled out the Lr32 and bored all the holes for the drawer slides. I went 37 mm from front edge then I measured the last hole on the actual drawer slide for the euro screw and laid it out on the box and bored those holes as well. next I used the domino for all the joinery. there was a little learning curve but nothing out of the ordinary.
Now I go to assemble and this is where I start to see issues. there were no issues with the routing, dominoing or Lr32. the problem is that the widths of my cabinet components were different. one top was 5/32 big. at this point I thinking oops, my bad I must have a bad process. but I did check the measurement after each cut at either end of the 8' rips and they checked out and I was satisfied. so I have a mystery on my hands. I made the adjustments and redodoed the top and went on with the project. I finished the build and am overall very happy with the results.
BTW, I calibrated the green adjustment knobs so there is no slop from saw to rail.
[attachimg=#]
I spent a bunch of time on FOG reviewing the posts about parallel ripping and different peoples processes. In between the two builds I received the parallel rip guides that use the t-track. and also I built a rack to store the guide rails on my garage door and my wife came home and opened the door and they fell out and hit the ground. my fault and I reworked the design so that cant happen again. there was no visible damage but I don't have a 9' straight edge to check it.
so now I go to start my second build which is a dresser for my daughter. its 3 cabinets with inset drawers and a door that get screwed together and is on wheels. she is gonna be going to college soon and I wanted it to be easy to move.
[attachimg=#]
my process is different this time because I have 3 sheets prefinished birch plywood stacked and clamped together. also I'm using the parallel rip guides. so I start by ripping 1/4" off of one edge. now I set the parallel guides very carefully and clamp the rail to the work piece(i do this every time).so this time I measure at both ends and the number is the same. now I check the center and I'm 3mm larger in the center. now I'm like ???. after I cleaned up the first edge I had to rotate the guide rail 180 degrees to reference off the freshly ripped edge to use the parallel rip guides. what I'm thinking is that I don't have a straight rail. I think its out by 1.5mm. so when I rotate it 180 degrees its out by 3mm. so anyways I unclamped the rail and lifted the rail off the board to look at it and then reset it only to get the same 3mm discrepancy. I have a home made mft style table for ripping and its not perfectly flat. its crowned up in the center by 1/8. I'm thinking this isn't going to make a difference unless I'm ripping on a bevel but am not sure. so i made the rip and the next rip (with no rotation of the guide rail) was the same width at both ends and the middle. now both sides of the rip is crowned the same way.
on with the build. routed the1/4" dado referencing off the back edge for the cab back, Lr32 54mm off front edge for the inset detail, domino joinery. all went on without a hitch. now for the assembly and the widths don't match up. I had to re cut and re dado 2 tops and got it to work.
[attachimg=#]
I have built hundreds of cabinets with traditional methods and have never had componentry widths not match up by this much. that's my only complaint and I'm not blaming festool for my issues. I'm wondering if someone else has had the same issue as me and what you did to change your process to get more accurate results.
on the upside I am extremely happy with how the tools performed in on every other level. faster.easier.smarter. is no joke. glue ready joints after every cut is a major timesaver. splinter free cuts on both sides of blade just blows me away,not only saving time and steps, but material too. crosscutting plywood has always been an issue and pretty much a total nightmare with a table saw. After full days of sawing, routing, dominoing, and sanding I had no dust on me and at the end of the day a small amount on the floor. I'm used to being covered head to toe in dust. building with the domino is such a superior way to build stuff. its so much stronger and quicker. before I was screwing everything together. personally I prefer to build fastnerless. or at least the appearance of fastnerless. it may seem a little slower but it finishes faster with out having to putty or do extra finishing to hide nail holes or screws. being able to use the router with the guide rails and the centerline on all 4 sides of the router makes it a breeze to use and am able to perform complex routes with ease compared to traditional methods. normally I would have to make a jig for everything for the router now I don't and I love it. it gives me so much confidence in the process. the Lr 32 is amazing and Ive honestly never been happier or had more confident in that aspect of cabinetmaking . just by adhering to a few simple rules of the 32mm system all the math on drawer box sizes ,door and drawer front sizes are all done for you. all you have to do is make your panels on an increment of 32mm and all the prefigured out math works like a charm(if you don't know about it check out this link) http://www.cabsystems.com/KISSII/KIIrivDe-mail.pdf
you don't need any fancy gigs for installing drawer slides or hinges if you lay out the holy rail at the right dimensions from front edge and from the back edge. all you have to do is use euro screws and screw your hardware into your pre drilled holes.
so basically I'm thrilled to be using these tool and have a renewed energy and excitement for woodworking but I need help to trouble shoot my parallel ripping method or not maybe its my table(i doubt it but maybe) maybe I need a new guide(i think so but maybe not). my confidence level has skyrocketed in other areas except in this area (all time low for parallel ripping) this is really the only thing I need dialed in and any help would be greatly appreciated.
My next strategy is to clean one edge and cut my next piece slightly oversized and then cut to actual size. I found a post about rips being concave and apparently humidity changes and stuff stressing out the sheet goods. I have to build one more sysport and will go through the whole process again probably this weekend.
Thanks in advance, John
First project I built were 2 home made sysports out of melamine. nothing complicated. I was very careful during the ripping process.I would rip a quarter off one length of the sheet as a starting point, then measuring both sides then clamping and then checking again and then ripping. I repeated this process 3 times. after my rips I measured the ends of the boards and they were on the $. at this point I'm really happy and everything is pretty straight forward as it should be. next I routed a 1/4" dado referencing off the back edge with the edge guide and I'm really enjoying working with the festools. I pulled out the Lr32 and bored all the holes for the drawer slides. I went 37 mm from front edge then I measured the last hole on the actual drawer slide for the euro screw and laid it out on the box and bored those holes as well. next I used the domino for all the joinery. there was a little learning curve but nothing out of the ordinary.
Now I go to assemble and this is where I start to see issues. there were no issues with the routing, dominoing or Lr32. the problem is that the widths of my cabinet components were different. one top was 5/32 big. at this point I thinking oops, my bad I must have a bad process. but I did check the measurement after each cut at either end of the 8' rips and they checked out and I was satisfied. so I have a mystery on my hands. I made the adjustments and redodoed the top and went on with the project. I finished the build and am overall very happy with the results.
BTW, I calibrated the green adjustment knobs so there is no slop from saw to rail.
[attachimg=#]
I spent a bunch of time on FOG reviewing the posts about parallel ripping and different peoples processes. In between the two builds I received the parallel rip guides that use the t-track. and also I built a rack to store the guide rails on my garage door and my wife came home and opened the door and they fell out and hit the ground. my fault and I reworked the design so that cant happen again. there was no visible damage but I don't have a 9' straight edge to check it.
so now I go to start my second build which is a dresser for my daughter. its 3 cabinets with inset drawers and a door that get screwed together and is on wheels. she is gonna be going to college soon and I wanted it to be easy to move.
[attachimg=#]
my process is different this time because I have 3 sheets prefinished birch plywood stacked and clamped together. also I'm using the parallel rip guides. so I start by ripping 1/4" off of one edge. now I set the parallel guides very carefully and clamp the rail to the work piece(i do this every time).so this time I measure at both ends and the number is the same. now I check the center and I'm 3mm larger in the center. now I'm like ???. after I cleaned up the first edge I had to rotate the guide rail 180 degrees to reference off the freshly ripped edge to use the parallel rip guides. what I'm thinking is that I don't have a straight rail. I think its out by 1.5mm. so when I rotate it 180 degrees its out by 3mm. so anyways I unclamped the rail and lifted the rail off the board to look at it and then reset it only to get the same 3mm discrepancy. I have a home made mft style table for ripping and its not perfectly flat. its crowned up in the center by 1/8. I'm thinking this isn't going to make a difference unless I'm ripping on a bevel but am not sure. so i made the rip and the next rip (with no rotation of the guide rail) was the same width at both ends and the middle. now both sides of the rip is crowned the same way.
on with the build. routed the1/4" dado referencing off the back edge for the cab back, Lr32 54mm off front edge for the inset detail, domino joinery. all went on without a hitch. now for the assembly and the widths don't match up. I had to re cut and re dado 2 tops and got it to work.
[attachimg=#]
I have built hundreds of cabinets with traditional methods and have never had componentry widths not match up by this much. that's my only complaint and I'm not blaming festool for my issues. I'm wondering if someone else has had the same issue as me and what you did to change your process to get more accurate results.
on the upside I am extremely happy with how the tools performed in on every other level. faster.easier.smarter. is no joke. glue ready joints after every cut is a major timesaver. splinter free cuts on both sides of blade just blows me away,not only saving time and steps, but material too. crosscutting plywood has always been an issue and pretty much a total nightmare with a table saw. After full days of sawing, routing, dominoing, and sanding I had no dust on me and at the end of the day a small amount on the floor. I'm used to being covered head to toe in dust. building with the domino is such a superior way to build stuff. its so much stronger and quicker. before I was screwing everything together. personally I prefer to build fastnerless. or at least the appearance of fastnerless. it may seem a little slower but it finishes faster with out having to putty or do extra finishing to hide nail holes or screws. being able to use the router with the guide rails and the centerline on all 4 sides of the router makes it a breeze to use and am able to perform complex routes with ease compared to traditional methods. normally I would have to make a jig for everything for the router now I don't and I love it. it gives me so much confidence in the process. the Lr 32 is amazing and Ive honestly never been happier or had more confident in that aspect of cabinetmaking . just by adhering to a few simple rules of the 32mm system all the math on drawer box sizes ,door and drawer front sizes are all done for you. all you have to do is make your panels on an increment of 32mm and all the prefigured out math works like a charm(if you don't know about it check out this link) http://www.cabsystems.com/KISSII/KIIrivDe-mail.pdf
you don't need any fancy gigs for installing drawer slides or hinges if you lay out the holy rail at the right dimensions from front edge and from the back edge. all you have to do is use euro screws and screw your hardware into your pre drilled holes.
so basically I'm thrilled to be using these tool and have a renewed energy and excitement for woodworking but I need help to trouble shoot my parallel ripping method or not maybe its my table(i doubt it but maybe) maybe I need a new guide(i think so but maybe not). my confidence level has skyrocketed in other areas except in this area (all time low for parallel ripping) this is really the only thing I need dialed in and any help would be greatly appreciated.
My next strategy is to clean one edge and cut my next piece slightly oversized and then cut to actual size. I found a post about rips being concave and apparently humidity changes and stuff stressing out the sheet goods. I have to build one more sysport and will go through the whole process again probably this weekend.
Thanks in advance, John