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Tip
#34
Planer
Pg.
1-3, Pg. 4-6, Pg.
7-9, Pg. 10-12, Pg.
13-15 (PDF)
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Planing
Boards to Identical Thicknesses
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Figure
21-12. To tell if one board has been planed down
to approximately the same thickness as another, place
the two boards side-by-side on a flat surface. Then
simply feel the step between the edges of the boards
with your hand.
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When thicknessing,
you often need to plane two or more boards to identical thicknesses.
To do this, start by planing the thickest board. Plane it
down to the thickness of the next thickest boards; then begin
to plane both boards at the same depth-of-cut settings. Cut
these two boards down to the thickness of the third thickest
board; then plane all three. Continue in this manner until
you are planing all of the boards. Never feed two or more
boards side-by-side through the planer. The boards may interfere
with each other as they pass through the machine, causing
them to jam or kick back.
A simple
way to tell if one board has been planed down to approximately
the same thickness as another is to place both boards on a
flat surface, side-by-side. With your hand, feel the step
from the edge of one board to the next (Figure
21-12). If the step seems higher than 1/64", continue
planing the thicker board. If it's smaller than 1/64"--or
there is no step-- you can begin planing both boards at the
same depth-of-cut settings.
Finish
up by planing all of the boards at the same depth-of-cut setting
at least once. This will insure that all boards are cut to
identical thicknesses.
Continue
to Squaring Stock
Back to Surfacing Rough Lumber
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