i am fascinated with the fact that this is possible with just a stopped cut on the shaper. to be sure we are speaking of the two beads/fillets that terminate in the V-shape - circled below. i assume the space between the beads is close to a round over.
i can see tilting the cutter to get the V but it would need to tilt parallel to the direction of feed, correct? i am only aware of spindles that tilt perpendicular to the feed direction.?
i am terrible in this kind of thinking but i like this detail and a challenge, so would love to learn if it is possible to do it on shaper.
round over bit was mentioned with raising the cutter, i assume to get the V detail. i am unable to visualize that.
the two beads appear to have a round top, if so that is sweet. a typical bullnose type bit will only do a fillet.
On Oct 13, 2020, at 3:23 AM, Martin Guiver via groups.io <martin.guiver@...> wrote:
?Hi Rob,
This moulding was produced on a spindle moulder with an appropriate cutter set and probably tilted as well! This enabled the shallow v grove to be cut and produce the corner bead.
Executed as a stop cut you can see that the diameter of the profile of the cutter is far greater on the top side of the corner bead than on the v grove. To give you a clue the cutter profile will be of the architrave type!
Hope that helps!
Regards Martin?
On 13 Oct 2020, at 01:45, imranindiana via groups.io <imranindiana@...> wrote:
?
Michael,
i assume robert is talking about the vertical routing detail that terminates in a V shape in top.
i would attempt to make the two fillets with round in between with a bullnose type bit in one pass.
round over bit would require two passes but complicating the stoping point as it would be beginning of one pass and end of the other.
i figures just use a chisel to make the V shape and then cleanup. not sure if there is enough material to use a hand router plane as it would be ideal.
imran
On Oct 12, 2020, at 5:34 PM, Michael Tagge <mike.j.tagge@...> wrote:
?
The ¡°v¡± or grove on the right? There¡¯s always the possibility for chisel clean up for square corners. Unless I¡¯m misunderstanding. I don¡¯t see the detail very clearly on my phone to analyze the nuance.
It¡¯s a three part cut from what I suggested. 1) round over full length. Then probably the same bit, but 2) raise it to get the step on a stopped cut. This is the front. 3) For the groove on the right side, it looks like a stopped
groove or v.
I cannot see a way to do it all at once if that is what you think I was suggesting.
if i understand what you are saying correctly, let¡¯s say the roundover bit is making the lower fillet and bottom half of round. how would you drop the workpiece while still traveling to get 1/2 of the V shape? seems like the travel to drop distance
ratio is close to 1:1.
imran
On Oct 12, 2020, at 4:45 PM, Michael Tagge <mike.j.tagge@...> wrote:
?
Looks like a stopped cut to me if I¡¯m looking at the right thing. I¡¯d probably recreate that with a round over then drop it to make a stepped round over in a stop cut setup. The groove or v would follow the same stopped cut plan.
Folks,? this is less a question about my Felder machines and more a question on edge detail and ending a round over detail prior to the end of the board.? The attached picture is as they say ... worth a thousand words and its what I'd like to do but have
no idea how to achieve the look.? I've tried a few different methods on exiting the router but can't get this look.? Any ideas would be appreciated.?