compound angles, rabbets, and tenons. It can also function as a shaper and a sander, when equipped with appropriate blades. For Situated beyond the saw blade, the splitter separates the wood to prevent the stock from binding on the blade. Most new saws
If you can find someone with a shaper, planer, joiner that can match the shape you can get the wood looking almost new quickly. You may have to offer to get their blades resharpened though!
Manufacturing your own molding isn't rocket science, just expensive to aquirre the tools. You would need a woodshaper with the appropriate bits, a good router with appropriate bits, these in the neighborhood of 1300.00 to do it right
really think twice about building wood storm windows. Aluminum or inexpensive and work well. Wood has to be painted often, annually and a router/router table or shaper. My guess is that if you already you mill on the edges of the wood. About any rail and stile bit
early 50's construction used one piece jambs with trim nailed on. the jambs were formed from a single piece of wood on a shaper, not the 2 pieces as the cased doors sold at the home centers for replacements and new construction are made. use
posts cut off and replaced with horrible treated wood. Those will be replaced by me too. And brand new 2 1/2 car garage with only the best wood working tools. The best saws, shaper, and table router I can afford. As I've said
My cabinets are wood,still in semi decent shaper and from knows who knows what year(60's 70's) one or two of the cabinets have a strange smell.kinda like strong vitamins.I tried orange clean MANY times and the smell is still there.can i do anything?? Jen
with limited woodworking experience. The tools needed beyond the usual homeowner's basic repair collection would include a shaper or router with router table, appropriate cutters, table/contractor/cabinet saw, woodworking clamps, jointer, planer
yes, you have the metal parts of a craftsman shaper fence minus the wood wings. to see the fence, go to http://www.owwm.com/ and look at the craftsman publications to see the details of the fence Carl