jointer woodworking

jointer woodworking
Woodworking Question: With a jointer. I know I would be better served by a plane, but ….?

Here's my situation: I have 300sqft of which is Oak flooring. He was pulled from an existing home (the victim of direct field) up. Therefore, it is a lacquer or urethane coating. I try to shave his head a 1 / 16 "or something close to the elimination of existing ones. The boards of the parquet floor are the standard 2" wide and vary in length from 2 m to 14 m. I know a plane would be a perfect tool to shave the wood. However, I do not have one, nor do I want to spend $ 300 + on one for this project. I'm in able to provide a jointer to borrow from someone to help me with. Any tips, advice, tips? Anyone have experience with a jointer?

If you plan to on the installation of wood as a word, then let the paint, install the floor (perhaps a new discount level – hand or power to the paint off the tongue and groove can be removed) then they cut and polished after it is installed. If you own a computer then it is installing now, you are going to need to sand it, take all proud edges and you do not take off too much wood. If you use only a couple of nice wood, "some days" then maybe want to have a coarse grit belt sander on the grain, a fine will be a function along it (you also need time) with this option, even if this could lead to rounding at the edges … Or maybe bite the bullet and buy a thickness planer / bench planner … or look yourself in the setting? a thickness planing machines would be a better option if you be it as a base reuse, it will have an exact thickness of your pack of wood, an electric planer can leave small ridges (due to the only 2 blades) and must are ground after.

Woodworking #6 – The Jointer’s Jumpin’

Since you found this site, you must enjoy working with wood. And if you’re like me, you’ve probably spent hundreds of hard-earned dollars on wood plans and projects that turned out to be disappointing (or maybe even disastrous!). Maybe you’ve halted projects in mid-stream because of frustration or from running out of ideas. To read more, please click here:Woodworking4Home

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