Posted: Thu Jul 24, 2014 9:20 am
On the areas with less radius, more flat, a drum tends to want to dig in and makes it difficult to keep a smooth line.
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Use a router insert with the starter pins. The drum can be adjusted for 'depth' beyond the pins by moving the table in/out.beatnik wrote:On the areas with less radius, more flat, a drum tends to want to dig in and makes it difficult to keep a smooth line.
Why not? Raise the quill, place the workpiece/pattern on the table, lower the quill and sand the inner edge.bffulgham wrote:The Shopsmith Pattern Sanding Guide would work on the OD, but not so well on the ID.
Maybe a custom table insert with a disk the same size as the sander drum.....Kinda like the Overhead Pin Routing concept.
Pretty much a duplicate of what BuckeyeDennis said.
If a 'large' oval, I do not see the 'scary' part.beatnik wrote:I do this regularly with curved pieces. You don't want to get an enclosed loop in a set up like this with a drum sander though. It would be scary. I think that's whats being said ?
I was referring to the earlier posts re interior sanding an oval with a drum sander using a 'pilot' and pattern.beatnik wrote:Maybe I've been around this 3 phase machinery too long, that set up shown has tossed pieces 40 ft.