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Скачать с ютуб Glue Line Ripping Blade 6 Week Review (WnW в хорошем качестве

Glue Line Ripping Blade 6 Week Review (WnW 5 лет назад


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Glue Line Ripping Blade 6 Week Review (WnW

This Ripping Blade is Amazing 👇👇 Click “Show More” for Stuff you probably want to know! 👇👇 📃Build Article: http://www.wordsnwood.com/ YOUR SUPPORT IS APPRECIATED: 💵 Become a Patron:   / wordsnwood   🛒 Buy a Plan: http://wordsnwood.com/plans/ ☕ Buy Me A Coffee: https://www.buymeacoffee.com/wordsnwood HERE ARE THE BASICS: I've owned this Freud Glue line ripping blade for 6 weeks now and used it to rip a lot of wood. YES it's amazing. YES it really produces a cut that can be glued. NO I was NOT paid to say this. I bought this blade with my own money. If you’re interested in one of the blades discussed in this video, please consider buying it via my Amazon Affiliate link. This helps my channel. (The Lee Valley Link is not an affiliate link.) https://amzn.to/2CzFDnW — Freud LM74R010 Glue Line Ripping Blade https://goo.gl/spgyh5 — Dimar Combination Blade @ Lee Valley Tools https://amzn.to/2CAcMzP — Other Glue Line Ripping Blades https://amzn.to/2BENZJa — Other Combination Blades I’ve been woodworking as a hobby for over 20 years, and I’ve always used combination blades in my Tablesaw. In my experience, if you buy a good one and clean the resin off it regularly they do a great job on most tasks. Right now I’m flipping between a Dimar combination blade that I got from Lee Valley tools and a Steel City blade that I picked up at a Wood show 6 or more years ago, back when Steel City was still in business. These blades do a fine job, But they do NOT make what I would call glue-ready joints. When it comes to ripping hardwood and then gluing it up to make panels, I usually go back to the jointer after cutting on the table saw for a cleanup pass. Right now I’m working on a kitchen, which include a lot of gluing of panels, since a lot of the drawer fronts are quite large. So I thought it was a good opportunity to try out one of these glue line rip blades. This was partly just a whim, I thought I’d try something new. But partly it was because I’ve heard other people saying good things about Freud glue line ripping blades over the years. I’ve had it for six weeks now, and pushed a lot of black cherry hardwood through it in that time. Are the results glass smooth? Well, no, but almost. It definitely leaves a surface that is as good as my jointer, if not better. I’ve glued up a whole bunch of drawer fronts in the past month using boards that are straight off the Tablesaw. The results are nice tight joints. My jointer, which has straight blades, leaves a slight ripple to the edge. The saw blade, in contrast, leaves a slight swirl along the cut edge. Both are pretty hard to show on camera. The down side, is that I’m now swapping blades a lot more. I kind of wish I had two table saws in the shop, not that I have room for that. It’d be neat if someone invented a two-bladed tablesaw… maybe have some funky mechanism that swings one blade down and the other blade up, then you could easily swap between ripping and combination blades Hmmm… ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- MORE MORE MORE: http://www.wordsnwood.com   / words.n.wood     / wordsnwood   ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- ---------- Thank-you!

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