Ripped boards. They are different widths.

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navycop
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Ripped boards. They are different widths.

Post by navycop »

I ripped a 3 1/4" board in half. One half came out 1 1/2". The other half came out 1 3/4". I was thinking about ripping the 1 3/4" down. I didn't know if that would be safe (close to blade). Or can I sand it on the disk sander? Got any plans for a jig or sled I could use?
Mark V 520, Ryobi 12" mitersaw, Delta 10" tablesaw, DC 3300.
Mike
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beeg
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Post by beeg »

Did ya have it set up to rip at 1 1/2"? I'd just rip the other one while it's set up. BUT be careful.
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fjimp
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Post by fjimp »

navycop wrote:I ripped a 3 1/4" board in half. One half came out 1 1/2". The other half came out 1 3/4". I was thinking about ripping the 1 3/4" down. I didn't know if that would be safe (close to blade). Or can I sand it on the disk sander? Got any plans for a jig or sled I could use?
What tool did you use to rip the boards? Have you measured width on both ends of each board? How about in the middle? Jim
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dusty
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Post by dusty »

navycop wrote:I ripped a 3 1/4" board in half. One half came out 1 1/2". The other half came out 1 3/4". I was thinking about ripping the 1 3/4" down. I didn't know if that would be safe (close to blade). Or can I sand it on the disk sander? Got any plans for a jig or sled I could use?


I would rip down the 1 3/4" piece to 1/1/2" before I would spend any time sanding it. PUSH STICK and FEATHER BOARD are a must if you do this.

But, I would run it through the surface planer to take off that last 1/4".
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charlese
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Post by charlese »

navycop wrote:I ripped a 3 1/4" board in half. One half came out 1 1/2". The other half came out 1 3/4". I was thinking about ripping the 1 3/4" down. I didn't know if that would be safe (close to blade). Or can I sand it on the disk sander? Got any plans for a jig or sled I could use?
Sounds like you wanted two boards 1⅝" minus saw kerf. Were you looking for two boards each 1½"? If so you can safely rip the wider board to 1½".

Use your splitter and upper saw guard, use a feather board to hold the wood to the fence, and use a fence straddler for the final several inches of the cut. I would choose a fence straddler rather than a push stick as there is no risk of it coming in contact with the blade. However a push stick will work if held against the fence.

A couple of hints - Please excuse me if I'm sounding too basic.
- Always saw a bit wider than the finished piece to allow for sanding.
- When sawing a board in half always allow for the width of the saw blade (kerf).
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a1gutterman
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Post by a1gutterman »

navycop,

When you use the featherboard (highly recommended), place it so that it puts preasure against your board ONLY BEFORE the board goes through the blade.
Tim

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rdewinter
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Post by rdewinter »

navycop
I don't understand how you could rip a 3 1/4" board and end up with a board of 1 3/4" and one of 1 1/2". 1 3/4" plus 1 1/2"= 3 1/4". Where's the kerf?

Bob
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navycop
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Post by navycop »

I did have the feather board in front of the blade. I just measured one board after it was cut. I just subtracted 1 3/4" from 3 1/4". The sum was 1 1/2". I didn't think about the kerf. But you get the point. I don't have a planer as dusty suggested. The SS did come with a fence straddler. I guess I can use that.
Mark V 520, Ryobi 12" mitersaw, Delta 10" tablesaw, DC 3300.
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