Posted: Tue Sep 07, 2010 9:31 pm
Good point!heathicus wrote:I thought the rest had hair on their head.
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Good point!heathicus wrote:I thought the rest had hair on their head.
Like the shoe design penniview. In my previous post where I said I used a pushstick, I actually meant to say a 'shoe'. Shipwright had first shown me that concept and I've stuck with it since. The conventional pushstick freaks me out. I only trust having a downward force on the stock and I just don't see a pushstick doing that at all. Fingers over the fence....that I do also, again, thanks to shipwright. I figured a guy that made it through an entire boatbuilding career while maintaining 10 intact fingers deserves credit for his methods and techniques.pennview wrote:Mike, another thing I should have mentioned earlier was that when using your technique you need to consider how to keep control of the stock and how to keep it against the fence. A push stick doesn't give much control. I guess one could use feather boards, but they get cumbersome if you have to keep adjusting them to varying size stock. If you're right handed and still a bit apprehensive, keeping the fence to the right of the blade and using both hands to control the stock, with the right hand pushing the wood is best. Of course, you should use a push shoe when the stock is too narrow to push the stock through with your bare hand. However you cut wood, be safe.
Also, kickback is something you don't want to experience.
Here are a couple of photos showing a push shoe that uses a replaceable strip of hardboard that hooks behind the stock and another showing a safer way to use your hand when ripping stock (just hook a couple of fingers over the fence when pushing the wood past the blade). Also there is a picture of a narrow shoe and a push stick (with the black handle). The latter is rarely used, simply because it doesn't give much control.
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mickyd wrote: I figured a guy that made it through an entire boatbuilding career while maintaining 10 intact fingers deserves credit for his methods and techniques.
mickyd wrote:Like the shoe design penniview. In my previous post where I said I used a pushstick, I actually meant to say a 'shoe'. Shipwright had first shown me that concept and I've stuck with it since. The conventional pushstick freaks me out. I only trust having a downward force on the stock and I just don't see a pushstick doing that at all. Fingers over the fence....that I do also, again, thanks to shipwright. I figured a guy that made it through an entire boatbuilding career while maintaining 10 intact fingers deserves credit for his methods and techniques.
Lovely.shipwright wrote: Isn't she pretty?
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Never saw one in AZ but since I won't be going there this year, she came to me.
Paul M