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Re: FD250


GLEN
 

Nice I never even thought about doing SOSS hinges with a mortising machine. That just made that purchase a little less painfull.



-----Original Message-----
From: Bellsouth dohertyj@... [felder-woodworking]
To: felder-woodworking
Sent: Sun, Jan 22, 2017 8:06 am
Subject: Re: [felder-woodworking] FD250

?
This Hammer video shows lots of mortising techniques too.


Joe in New Orleans




On Jan 22, 2017, at 9:30 AM, patrick walsh pwalsh651@... [felder-woodworking] <felder-woodworking@...> wrote:

I had thought about end mill bits.

I also noticed the rangate cutters.

Also Mac i looked into the cutter you suggested. It looks to me to be a quality?square chisel mortisi ng bit. I am?pretty sure i need a specific chuck to use such a cutter on my FD250.

I originaly started purchasing most of my machines for hobby use with the hopes that beung a finish carpenter " i would use them if i had them" to make a living. This has increasingly become?my experience. Kinda a "if you build it they will come" mentality.

Point is as the work requires i keep crossing bridges and or running into impasses and or finding new useses and applications for my equiptment. Point in mentioning is as im sure we all know it can at times be very costly. As of late i have been using my shaper a ton. As Mac suggested in my dust collector thread sometimes its one step forward three steps back.At The ?moment it sure feels that way.

With this current project i can get the client to assume at least half the cost of tooling if not the full cost. I do need to resonible though hence a end mill bit maybe being a better solution for me than a a square mortise bit as then i also need a pricey chuck. I can charge the bit to the customer but the chuck would be difficult.

Im having the same problme with shaper tooling. I only have a 30mm spindle. I keep running into instances where i need a specific cutter like tomorrow. Everything ends up being 1.25 that can be had in days as apposed to weeks. The end result is shims. Inthe short long term i just need to piny up the $500 for a 1.25 spindle.?

The only problem is it is really never ending. After the 1.25 spindle i could use high speed router spindle. After that another shaper as having only one is a pita!

As much as i love tools "and i do" it can become quite stressful how much all?this stuff cost.

Sorr y for the rant just offering some perspective on the situatuion. Really for the moment i just need the least expensive solution to getting?my machine to cut a straight clean mortise so i can get this dam?kitchen built.?

Long term my shop can use many many additional tools assesories and upgrades.
??

On Sunday, January 22, 2017,?andy.giddings@...?[felder-woodworking] <felder-woodworking@...> wrote:
?

Think Mac is spot on based on my experience with the Mortise Attachment. I assumed that the Westccot chuck would be concentric to the spindle, but its very sensitive to the 3 grub screws that lock it onto the spindle (don't know if the FD250 has the same locking method). If the fixture is the same, its very important to adjust the screws evenly while using an accurate bar or dowel in the chuck with a height/dial gauge.

Once I had that sorted out, the birdsmouth cutters performed better. I also found that the Felder cutters were not that sharp - the Rangate cutters are far better out of the box. You might also want to try end mills or two fluted router bits - cut a lot quicker and just as smoothly even with the lower speed compared to a router



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