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RE: Best way to cut this? - Lynden - 08-16-2017

Google and youtube....

cutting beehive handles

https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=cutting+beehive+handles

cutting beehive handles


RE: Best way to cut this? - Dumb_Polack - 08-16-2017

I did this on the ts for my beehive boxes.

Install your dadoes in your ts

Drop the blade, put box over blade then rotate it up (in my case it was 8 revolutions)

(Clamp a stop block to your fence so they all start centered on your boxes).

Then, bump your fence over a bit (so that the hand hold is approx 1" wide) lower the blades and repeat the process.

I did this technique for about 15 boxes (broods and supers) I made.

Because the sides are different lengths from the front of your boxes, you'll need to adjust your stopblock, if you want hand holds on all 4 sides.

Pm me if what I wrote doesn't make sense


RE: Best way to cut this? - daddo - 08-16-2017

You could use a 5" hole saw and cut the angle using a jig, then glue the end strip on to complete it.  
Raised


[Image: bee_board.jpg][/img]

??


RE: Best way to cut this? - Steve N - 08-17-2017

(08-16-2017, 03:58 PM)daddo Wrote: You could use a 5" hole saw and cut the angle using a jig, then glue the end strip on to complete it.  
Raised


[Image: bee_board.jpg][/img]

??

After looking at the you tube vids for using a saw, knowing what cutters were out there for a router it is either this, but I think it would need to be an 8" plus hole saw, or a shaper knife that was custom made. Only problem I have with this way is there is something to keep the hole saw from skittering off course. They aren't made for drilling down, and only partially cutting something. They want to make a "hole" not a scratch. A lot of the TS, and hand saw methods would provide a "ditch" theirs are only a smallish scoop rather than the big handle like in Coolers pic, which is what I have seen most often around here.

With no guard over the blade, and only how much you move a piece of ply sliding between 2 ply runners, I get the willies watching the first u tube vid on how too. Sure not gonna offer a safety hall of fame recommendation on it.





RE: Best way to cut this? - daddo - 08-17-2017

I was going to suggest that way but was criticized once for suggesting side cutting on the TS once.
Big Grin


RE: Best way to cut this? - Stwood_ - 08-17-2017

4-6 weeks ago over on the TSP forum, there was a guy that lost 2 fingers doing the bee box handle cut. Table saw with dado blade.



We have bees. Come time to make some boxes, I imagine I'll just put straps on the boxes.
Easy/cheap/safe


RE: Best way to cut this? - joe1086 - 08-17-2017

I've never been within 100' of a beehive and have no aspirations to change now.

But, here is a video of making the d-handles with a grinding burr on a drill press. Drill press/burr

Link to a post in a beekeeping forum about it's use Here. The thread is old but there are recent responses to it, including from the burr supplier from July 2016.


RE: Best way to cut this? - Timberwolf - 08-17-2017

(08-16-2017, 10:13 AM)BeeMan Wrote: Hello,

I want to cut a recessed handhold into a board and need to repeat the cut many times.
These handholds are used on beehive boxes and are on each side, so there are 4 per box, and I want to make a couple hundred such boxes. So I would like to make the cut in a single step.

I attached a drawing of what I am trying to cut.

Thanks
Moe
,,,,,,,,,,,,,
Jig up a chop saw with a small stacked dado blade set.

With a little machine shop work, you could modify a milling machine cutter...


RE: Best way to cut this? - fredhargis - 08-17-2017

Probably one of those things where you wished you had a CNC (or a friend with one).


RE: Best way to cut this? - BeeMan - 08-17-2017

Thanks all. My phone died right after I posted this.
I'm going to give a cheap bowl bit a try, to see the results.