Question...
I haven't really done anything with solid wood yet (other than dimensional lumber), but I have a piece of Brazillian Cherry now that I would like to use for a project.
The board was already dry when I bought it, but it is slightly cupped and I'm concerned about trying to flatten it before cutting it. I'm not too worried about the edges, since I can fix that easily enough by cutting with the TS 55, but I don't have (nor do I currently have the room to store / money to buy) a propper planer, so I need to do so using other tools, preferably those I already have.
I am thinking of positioning it on a surface in the most stable way I can (either with those pads under it that prevent it from slipping, or possibly clamped) and trying to flatten it "in essence" using a coarse-grit Cristal on my Rotex 150, then flipping and doing the other side.
Once both sides are close to flat that way, I could try to finish it using a hand plane. I'm not very good with hand planes (at least not yet), so I'm hoping to get the board approximately flat before I start working on it with one.
:-\
Is this a reasonable plan? It's about the best I can think of right now (with what I have available), but I wanted to run it by those with more experience first to see if anyone caught anything I missed here.
Would there be any advantage to using the hard pad of the Rotex at any point? I can afford to add one of those to my collection if it would help, but if I'm planning on finishing with the hand plane anyway, and the soft pad is the one I usually see recommended for agressive sanding, I'm not sure how much of a help the hard pad would be in this situation...
Thank you!
I haven't really done anything with solid wood yet (other than dimensional lumber), but I have a piece of Brazillian Cherry now that I would like to use for a project.
The board was already dry when I bought it, but it is slightly cupped and I'm concerned about trying to flatten it before cutting it. I'm not too worried about the edges, since I can fix that easily enough by cutting with the TS 55, but I don't have (nor do I currently have the room to store / money to buy) a propper planer, so I need to do so using other tools, preferably those I already have.
I am thinking of positioning it on a surface in the most stable way I can (either with those pads under it that prevent it from slipping, or possibly clamped) and trying to flatten it "in essence" using a coarse-grit Cristal on my Rotex 150, then flipping and doing the other side.
Once both sides are close to flat that way, I could try to finish it using a hand plane. I'm not very good with hand planes (at least not yet), so I'm hoping to get the board approximately flat before I start working on it with one.
:-\
Is this a reasonable plan? It's about the best I can think of right now (with what I have available), but I wanted to run it by those with more experience first to see if anyone caught anything I missed here.
Would there be any advantage to using the hard pad of the Rotex at any point? I can afford to add one of those to my collection if it would help, but if I'm planning on finishing with the hand plane anyway, and the soft pad is the one I usually see recommended for agressive sanding, I'm not sure how much of a help the hard pad would be in this situation...
Thank you!