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Thread: ????Power/Neander Sythesis - HELP!!!

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Toronto, ON
    Posts
    613

    ????Power/Neander Sythesis - HELP!!!

    Hi all -
    I'm starting a pair of bookcases for my son. They'll be made of MDF.

    I want to create the appearance of frame and panel construction on the gables but will simply biscuit-join 3/4" rails & stiles to 1/2" panels. I'll router a chamfer on the rails & stiles but can only do so BEFORE I glue everything up.

    My plan is to use the router table and stop routing just short of where the rails & stiles will meet. I'll finish the corners with a bullnose plane, and I must aDMIT, I've always wanted a bullnose plane.

    Seeing MDF is murderous on bits & blades, is this the best tool/technique? My chisel skills aren't great and routering the chamfer after assembly - (if there's enough room to get in) - will give me rounded corners (aarrgghh!!)

    Thank you. Howard
    Howard Rosenberg

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    N E Arkansas
    Posts
    386

    Stopped router cut

    Quote Originally Posted by Howard Rosenberg
    Hi all -
    I'm starting a pair of bookcases for my son. They'll be made of MDF.

    I want to create the appearance of frame and panel construction on the gables but will simply biscuit-join 3/4" rails & stiles to 1/2" panels. I'll router a chamfer on the rails & stiles but can only do so BEFORE I glue everything up.

    My plan is to use the router table and stop routing just short of where the rails & stiles will meet. I'll finish the corners with a bullnose plane, and I must aDMIT, I've always wanted a bullnose plane.

    Seeing MDF is murderous on bits & blades, is this the best tool/technique? My chisel skills aren't great and routering the chamfer after assembly - (if there's enough room to get in) - will give me rounded corners (aarrgghh!!)

    Thank you. Howard

    Howard could you cut the rails and stiles ends with a mitre cut and route the full length of the stiles, since as I understand there will be not need for strength in the frames.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Toronto, ON
    Posts
    613

    Hey, Bobby

    Hi Bobby - Thanks for your reply - I thought of that but mitres on my CS are a slow, inexact process in view of my soon-to-be replaced mitre gauge.

    Speaking of mitre/miter... are you an expatriate Canadian? Or are you from the UK? Mitre always jumps out at me on the US WW forums. Thank you. Howard

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