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Location: Cumming, GA.
I use a full fence and a drum sander. Works pretty well for me.
Frank
Frank
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Location: Lewiston, NY
Nope. I use a tall flat fence. I face joint the board, plane the other side flat and parallel, and then joint both edges square to the faces. Then I take a slice of veneer off one face, then the other, using a uniform feed and keeping the board pressed flat to the tall fence. This keeps any change in moisture content in the board balanced and it rarely bows if you do it this way. If you try to take consecutive slices from one side it will bow if the moisture content in the center is different from the faces. If your BS is set up to cut straight you will get very nice, flat veneer of uniform thickness from one end to the other. Then I repeat the process of face jointing and planing before taking two more slices of veneer.
Doing as I described above makes it a purely mechanical process, no steering required as there constantly is with a point fence. What I lose in jointing and planing I get back with not losing slices that are too thin or thick, tapered, etc.
John
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Location: CinDay
A while back Earl, Lumber Yard, sold some tall point fences for the 18" Rikons, and I bought one. If I am making just a few cuts I use the point fence. If I am going to be making several cuts I'll get the fence set up, and dialed in. I generally face joint after cuts, just to get the off blade side as clean as possible. Of course prior to starting I edge joint, and face joint one side. Put in good, get out good [shrug]
Worst thing they can do is cook ya and eat ya
GW
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I found this article from Highland Woodworking to be useful.
http://www.highlandwoodworking.com/libra...20wood.pdfI have some 8/4 mesquite I'd like to resaw into 3 pieces and will be stretching the capacity of my 14" Jet to get it done.
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Location: Asheville, North Carolina
Of course it depends on the material and how it's behaving, but I have always used a single point fence. Your ability to steer the wood is important. After trying a bunch of different blades and widths over the years I have always come back to 1/2" flexband @ 3tpi. They're cheap so you can change them out when they begin to dull, probably 4 or 5 to an expensive resaw blade. My old Tannewitz 24" only resaws to 11", but I find things get hairy over that height(cupping). I've cut miles of veneer with this setup and it would be difficult to convince me to change it.
Bill
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I use a full fence, wide blade (1" resaw on a Laguna 14" BS) I got tired of drift using the 1/2" resaw blade on my 14" Delta BS. Works great.