Yes. It was actually the "offcut" I was after and it was perfect along it's entire length as expected. It was meant for a vanity drawer. I moved on to deeper drawers and all those rips came out straight. I have enough stock left to recreate this rip so I think I'll do that and report the result here.Ok that makes more sense to me the that the sheet is indeed dead straight.
Out of curiosity, assuming the sheet ended up the exact dimension you were after, have you measured the exact width of the offcut to see if there's any variation along it?
Yup. That is tension in the wood itself. I have had that happen lots of times, when cutting on a giant industrial beam saw that literally cannot cut crooked. I used to cut 4" strips, from an entire sheet, stacked 4 sheets high, on that machine, and a few of them would bow like that.I think it is a problem with the plywood quality.
Seth
For some people it is literally about storage space and handling issues. That 300mm makes a difference in a van.Great tip — thank you for the photo!
Side question — why did you get the 2700 track, and not the 3000 track? A buddy and I are trying to learn the logical reason.
Asian Birch is the usual candidate, though it does "just happen" with the regular "good stuff" too.Have y’all figured out the clues for such wonkiness?
How would us normies be able to detect bad plywood sheets?![]()
It's the width of the off-cut. If you did exactly the same, but 8" wide, it wouldn't happen.OK, didn't expect my "Pringle problem" to garner much attention so pardon the late response. I'll attempt to answer any questions I've received in response here.
Yes. The track is clamped on both ends and the offcut is precisely the same size from one end to the other. The sheet of ply is left perfectly straight. Only the 3 3/4" offcut exhibits the curve.
During the cut the entire 4'x8' sheet is supported using a custom made interlocking support system that runs fully both directions. there's no bending taking place. although admittedly, the effect is similar to as if something like a bend in the middle occurred.
I'm just using the one perfectly straight 2700mm track. I use the 2700 because I travel with it and it's enough to rip full 8 foot lengths. 3000 is nicer in a large shop but at this point I know well enough how to place the 2700 that it's no bother.
I haven't seen this happen more than a few times to me over the past 5 years. Certainly never twice in two days and never with such a dramatic bend(~1/4" concave) in each board. The first bend happened toward the center of a leftover 3 foot wide by 8 foot long sheet. In other words, the first 4 rips were fine and then the last one warped. And the second time it happened was on the first cut, of a brand new 4x8 sheet. Both were sheets of ply were stored nearly vertically on edge at the jobsite for a week. The flooring is tile but stickers were used and the sheets looked dead flat. There was no discernable curve to them.
I'm in CA so although the weather has been changing over the past week, it's still CA so no rain and not much humidity.
Could the speed 6 blade rotation be problematic? Was I moving too slowly? Or perhaps it has to do with the 42T blade? Should I consider a dedicated 12T rip blade? If it turns out that is the answer, it would in effect mean I transport two saws. One with a rip blade, one with all purpose blade.
Thanks for all the responses. As you can see from my replies, I'm hoping the "It's just bad wood" answers are not what I have to live with because that's going to get expensive quickly.
Thanks for the info. I did cut a 5.5 inch and 10.25" rip at the same time and both came out fine. I also had a 1 inch rip from that sheet that came out straight. All of that combined made me wonder why the 3.5 inch section was the only one affected. But just chalk it up to the wonders of modern plywood construction I guess.It's the width of the off-cut. If you did exactly the same, but 8" wide, it wouldn't happen.
The humidity fluxuation is not really a thing with plywood, it's just that initial drying. Plywood is made up of green veneers (especially the rotary-cut type) so the potential for some difference in moisture content exists.