Thin kerf saw blade for cabinet repair
Need very thin kerf table saw blade to repair of some oak cabinet doors.
Repairing some solid oak cabinet doors (came with 20 yr old house, didn’t make’em myself) that have split from vertical strips expanding the center section made with grain at 90 deg to them. (fabricator did nothing to accomodate stresses – ugh!) Want the thinnest 10″ table saw blade to separate edge strips from center, so I can re-use as much material as possible (have about 20 doors to fix). Tricky bit is that the vertical strips are rips and the center boards are cross-cut. Suggestions or ideas (besides making all new from scratch..) Thanks.
Replies
Post some pictures. I may have something for you.
Thanks
YCf D.
Off topic but I have an idea for you. I put a small piece of tubing on the hex wrench for the EZ and now store it in the small square groove inserted from the end. Have not lost it yet.
Bob
Good idea.
Send me a picture and we post it.
Who needs new idea dept. when I have you guys.;)
Thanks ras.
YF D
We will see how they come out. Not sure just what the size of the tubing but I think it is oxygen tubing, roughly 1/4 od.
Edited 12/31/2005 9:17 pm ET by rasconc
Nice. I like it.
Just don't ask me for a million dollars.:)
Thanks B.
Happy and EZ new year.
I send you an Ez Square for this one.
http://eurekazone.com/gallery/sliding-Fence-Square
Glad you like it. Still waiting for that good meal you were going to do for the bet. Did you ever find one of those Craftsman twin cutters? I would be happy to send you mine to look at if you want. I was about to order the router base and some replacement edge strips. E-mail me.
Bob
Whaou.
You remember tttthe bet? that was 2004?
Happy new year.
Edited 12/31/2005 10:04 pm ET by dinothecarpenter
http://forums.taunton.com/tp-breaktime/messages?msg=65773.11
I can not believe it is New Years eve and we are sitting here doing this!
Just finished a steak and working on a glass of wine. Hot tub and champagne later though.
Edited 12/31/2005 10:10 pm ET by rasconc
I don't say nothing.
I only ask you if you remember the bet.
takeitezmyfriend.
soory bad me noo spieak god enklisi
howdoyoulikethisnow?
Happy new year my friend. Got the router base. That is a fine piece of machinery. Thought you were going to send some edge strips also. I am waiting for my square when the time comes.
You did not say about whether you wanted to borrow the Craftsman twin cutter or not. I found a "safe saw" attachment for a grinder that looks scary, can't find it again, it is not the one that looks like a chain saw. It looks like the Craftsman but do not see anything about twin blades on it.
http://forums.taunton.com/tp-breaktime/messages?msg=66327.12
Edited 1/9/2006 7:50 pm ET by rasconc
This week.
The edges with the square.
Thanks razz.
YCF Dino
óáò åõ÷áñéóôïýìå
this is greek to me.. whatever
Supposedly "thank you" according to some on-line translator.
OK.
Imagine the problems that I have?
YCF D.
Thought I would jog your memory. 66327.18
I will be in touch. Will not commercialize here.
Bob
I might try ripping them on a bandsaw and then using an edge sander to clean up for re-gluing. If you get the right bandsaw blade you can get a kerf under 1/16".
You can have your saw sharpening shop grind a blade thinner for you... they hit the sides of all the teeth, maybe get you down to 3/32" or so.
David
A thin kerf is already thinner then 3/32"
A thin kerf what?
Table saw blade, sorry I was assuming that you were refering to having a table saw blade ground down on the sides to thin it down from 1/8"
Doug
I'm not sure I'm understanding the entire picture, but wondering if you've considered that you'll likely be cutting through the joinery? Seems to me that if that's the case, by the time you get done with all this work and redoing the joints, etc new doors might look like a pretty attractive option.
Thanks everyone for the suggestions!