rvieceli said:I'm going to be contrary, not just to be contrary but because I believe it.
DON"T RIP IT APART.
I work in slabs all the time and that sounds like a magnificent slab. For a dining room table, your fifty two inch end is probably going to be to wide. For many people a width between 30 and 42 inches is more than acceptable. We are currently using a 30 inch wide DR table and it works fine.
Since you will have to figure out the rip, take some time to rethink the plan. That is a massive table. Are you going to keep the overall length around the ten foot mark?
Many folks can't visualize these pieces in their home environment. I'd suggest one of two things. If you can wrestle the piece into the spot it will occupy then haul it in and lay it on some sawhorses or the existing table and live with it for a while.
If that won't work, then throw a couple of pieces of plywood or maybe foam board under the slab. Trace the outline and cut it out with a jig saw and flop that in your space.
Tom Bellemare said:I have a friend who's a successful attorney and who bought a really big, fancy cherry dining room table. All I've ever seen on it was overflow, bulk groceries and unorganized laundry fresh from the drier...
Tom
rvieceli said:I'm going to be contrary, not just to be contrary but because I believe it.
DON"T RIP IT APART.
I work in slabs all the time and that sounds like a magnificent slab. For a dining room table, your fifty two inch end is probably going to be to wide. For many people a width between 30 and 42 inches is more than acceptable. We are currently using a 30 inch wide DR table and it works fine.
Since you will have to figure out the rip, take some time to rethink the plan. That is a massive table. Are you going to keep the overall length around the ten foot mark?
Many folks can't visualize these pieces in their home environment. I'd suggest one of two things. If you can wrestle the piece into the spot it will occupy then haul it in and lay it on some sawhorses or the existing table and live with it for a while.
If that won't work, then throw a couple of pieces of plywood or maybe foam board under the slab. Trace the outline and cut it out with a jig saw and flop that in your space.
WoodWhisperer said:Some really good pointers for cutting thick wood.
Not to get off subject but where do you guys get your live edge timber?
Sean
lenick01 said:I'm looking for some pointers on how to rip a 3 inch thick live edge slab. I have a 10 foot long slab that's destined to become a dining room table.
PA floor guy said:Since we cannot get sword saws here in the states, has anyone looked into the prazi sword saw add on. You can install it on most worm drive circular saws. Other than that, you need a big beam saw.
WoodWhisperer said:Some really good pointers for cutting thick wood.
Not to get off subject but where do you guys get your live edge timber?
Sean