Of course the best went into the top and next best into the ends. Note the triangle I have drawn on in chalk. This clearly shows me the match and edge to be joined incase the parts get mixed up later on.

The two ends will come from one length, so next I had to cut through to separate the the parts.
The next step was was to thickness all these pieces (which ranged in thickness from 26-23mm) to the final thickness of 21 mm. I had already straightened them on the jointer, so it was just a matter of putting them through the thicknesser - See movie below.
Two things happened during this process. Firstly a knot came loose in one of the boards for the internal dividers. I decided to glue it back in and will hide this somewhere towards the back of the cabinet. Not wanting to wait for the glue to dry I decided to just screw it back on - strong enough to continue my machining.
The second thing was that I was getting far too much tearout in the surface of this Fiddleback Blackwood, even though my cutters were razor sharp.
At 22mm I decided to revert to the widebelt sander, which worked a treat. I was happy with the final thickness of 20.5mm, sanded to 80 grit, with no tearout at all...... Very happy indeed.
Next step was to straighten the edge of each board to joint together. Some people do this on the jointer or with handplanes, however I prefer to use my Altendorf panel saw. Accurate to 0.1mm over 3m I reckon this is far more accurate and easier than any other method I know of. With a 48 TPI blade I get a perfect edge for jointing. See the movie below.
Tomorrow I will see about Domino jointing these boards together and then gluing them up.

Disregard my question on facebook, you answered it here. Altendorf, man that is a nice saw. I had the exact same problem with a few pieces of figured walnut. I was getting to much chip out. The problem is that I don't have a sweet super wide belt sander. I've decided that if busy picks up that I will have to get one of those as well. It would have made my life these last 3 weeks so much easier.
ReplyDeleteThe widebelt sure is good. Saves tons of time.
ReplyDeleteYou should get one - they are fun !
or find a shop nearby who can do your sanding for you.
"Tearout" "48 TPI"
ReplyDeleteI like the movies. I especially like the camera work in the thicknessing shot.
Is making movies while machining normally permitted in your OHS policy?