Keep in mind you don't have to get the table absolutely perfect. Fit a wood/MDF backing board on the table then skim it flat usign your router head. Even if the machine is slightly twisted this will compensate for the twist.
It pays to use the biggest cutter your spindle will handle and run at the highest feed rate possible otherwise it takes forever. Les On 22/04/2015 05:44, Gregg Eshelman wrote: > First you need a level assembly area. That can be as basic as four > jack stands with flat plates on top, all carefully shimmed to the > exact height/level. Weld the bases down to steel plates so weight can > be piled on. Put the pieces of the frame on the stands, check for > level, clamp then tack weld to each other and to the stands. Alternate > welding short bits at each corner. For big frames you'll need stands > in the middle of the long sections. Once you have the main frame > welded together flat and true you can weld on other pieces as you > build it upside down. Cut it loose from the stands, flip over, tack > back down and finish the top. Or if you welded legs on while it was on > the stands, move it to its final location, level it and attach it to > the floor then finish welding on the top side parts. Or you could > start by attaching the legs to the floor, shimming them all to be > level with each other, then build the table in place. Once you get > enough pieces welded together it's not going to bend or twist. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ BPM Camp - Free Virtual Workshop May 6th at 10am PDT/1PM EDT Develop your own process in accordance with the BPMN 2 standard Learn Process modeling best practices with Bonita BPM through live exercises http://www.bonitasoft.com/be-part-of-it/events/bpm-camp-virtual- event?utm_ source=Sourceforge_BPM_Camp_5_6_15&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=VA_SF _______________________________________________ Emc-users mailing list Emc-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/emc-users