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optimizing plywood
Hi there,
Hope you're well. I'm using 3/8 inch baltic birch plywood to create dome-shapes. The attached photo was my first test in thicker, cheaper plywood, but you get the idea. Right now I'm using a tapered ballnose with 10% stepover and it's good, but I still have to do sanding before I apply a dye, stain, etc. I'm not doing a roughing pass.
Is a tapered ballnose best for this operation? Is there anything else I can do to minimize sanding? Or are there any tips on how to best sand a small piece like this?
many thanks
stuart
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Re: optimizing plywood
Hi S84 - What is your actual stepover vs a %? To minimise sanding you will need to :
1) Do a finishing pass with very sharp tool of say <0.5mm stepover
2) or you can use a form tool such as a 1/2" coving tool and do it in one pass vs many small passes.
either way very sharp tools are required. For sanding use a sanding sponge not paper and seal the timber with shellac, PVA or a sander sealer before you sand. This will lock up the grain and make sanding much easier.... dye prior to sealing by the way...Cheers Peter
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1 Attachment(s)
Re: optimizing plywood
Hi there,
Many thanks. Attached is what I did with my tapered ball nose.
In another forum, a user suggested doing 1/4 ballnose roughing pass, then a 1/8 ballnose finish pass. Any thoughts on that?
The coving tool suggestion blew my mind-- I hadn't thought of that.
Same for the sanding sealer... I'm trying to do a row of 8 pendants or so each with different settings so I can take notes and compare.
thanks again and all the best
stuart
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Re: optimizing plywood
resilient grinding will help you. 1/4 ballnose roughing pass, then a 1/8 ballnose finish pass seems like a good solution
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Re: optimizing plywood
Interestingly, your best bit bet might be an 'innie' rather than an 'outy.' Have a look at these tools...
https://www.toolstoday.com/media/cat.../1/5139_2_.jpg
https://www.toolstoday.com/plunging-...uter-bits.html
You may need to adhere your stock to a spoil board but this approach would likely produce the nicest finish the fastest way.
Hope this helps!
Brian
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Re: optimizing plywood
Unless you are doing this for fun, there may be faster ways to do this with manual machines and get a better finish when complete. Because of the opposing grain of the cross plys, it will be difficult to get a clean cut with conventional cutters.
You may want to consider cutting you blank with a hole saw without the centering drill. CA glue the blank to a wood mandril and take it to a belt sander. No torn grain from the cutter (which is clearly visible in your photo), and a much smoother finish after different grades of abrasive. Many folks that do manual wood turning take it a step further and apply stain and then CA glue for finish while still on the lathe. Part off and you're done.