I think that Hone, should do very nicely for you Arkady.
With diamond hones, I normally use medium or coarse. When honing my router
bits, 30-50 passes per side is what I normally do. To keep the bits sharpdose
not take a lot of work. Now when I buy used router bits, that can be a loaded
questi
Hello Curtis
What you say about
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B4WFTW/_encoding=UTF8?coliid=IRINIM1TKWQPE&colid=W6SB3AN8FKJ0&psc=1
What grit you use and how light or hard you treat the bit?
Arkady
2018-02-19 17:57 GMT+02:00 'Curt George' via Legacy Ornamental Mills <
legacy-ornamental-mills@googl
Hello and Good morning everyone. Thank you Joe for your views on this topic. I
like the Shop Smith duplicator, like you said "to get into all the "nooks" and
"crannies", I like to think of it like this, you can Attack the wood at the
proper angles to get the best results.The other two stiles
Hello ArkadyI use a diamond honing stone. I own a few different ones,
Rockler's work well but I like ones a little longer, so I have bought a few
over the years.
http://www.rockler.com/diamond-hone-sharpening-set?utm_source=bing&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=(ROI)%20Shopping%20-%20Top%20Sellers
Hi Curt
When I sent my last message on the topic I had't read Mike's response.
Undercutting can be done on the SS
but would require rotation of the router about the B axis.
Regards
Ron
In a message dated 2/18/2018 12:19:56 PM Eastern Standard Time,
legacy-ornamental-mills@googlegroups.com wr
hi tim!...my first thought after reading your post is to say that you might
not be happy with the tolerance level a legacy, converted to CNC, could
provide you, especially since you are accustomed to working with some very
nice, precision equipment... you could add linear bearings to the three
good morning gentlemen!...a couple of comments on templates and copying...
we do quite a bit of multiples in our shop, mostly 4, 6, and 8...extremely
rare if we do more than that of any one piece... over the years we have
tried and used a few different types of copiers, all on our lathe, not the
Hi Curt
I agree with your point. However, I think that the Shop Smith approach, where
the copy follower is the same shape as the cutter, goes a long way in solving
that problem.
Regards,
Ron
In a message dated 2/18/2018 12:57:25 PM Eastern Standard Time,
legacy-ornamental-mills@googlegroups.co