08-04-2016, 11:20 AM
Trying to figure out where I went wrong. Making half-lapped square lattice for a fence - a lot of it.
I was cutting 1-1/4" dados across 6"x8' boards (which would later be ripped into 1-1/4" strips)
I used a cross-cut sled with an 8' bed, and used my dado-stack at 3/4". Thus, each half-lap cut required two passes.
I made a wooden "key" which was exactly the width of my dado-blade and mounted it to the sled to the left of the blade.
For each 8' length, I carefully marked and cut the first 1-1/4" dado cutting to knife-marked lines and verified a snug fit.
Then, much like cutting box joints, I simply moved my workpiece over to the left each time, indexing off my pin.
But because each dado required two passes to get the 1-1/4" width, I'd first reference the left edge of the key against the left edge of the previous dado, then slide it over so the right edge of the key referenced the right side of the previous dado.
See image:
By all accounts that I can think of, this should have led to full repeatability. As long as my first dado was the right width, I'd expect all subsequent ones to be the same width, and same spacing.
But what I found was that somewhere, some small error was accumulating, and I'd get a few cuts into my 8' length and find that the width of my resulting 2-pass dado was getting greater and greater.. I'd adjust and keep going. (BIG MISTAKE- the first time I noticed this happening I should have done a full stop to figure out why.)
In the end, this progressive error meant that when it came time to fit together the half-lap lattice (4'x8' panels of it) they didn't just snap together like Lincoln Logs, rather, I had to tweak cuts and introduce gaps in the half-laps to make things fit. What a nightmare.
I was able to more or less correct the situation by ganging the parts together, and using the router and a dado-jig (which I probably should have done from the start, in hindsight) to cut new "best fit" and in the end, the panels look more or less fine. (it is a fence after all) and you really have to look closely for the gaps.
But I just can't wrap my head around how the setup would lead to progressively wider dados.. If the first dado was exactly 1-1/4" and the pin was exactly the width of the dado-stack then why would they get progressively wider??
PSA - If you are ever building a fence and decide to make a bunch of 8'x4' lattice panels by hand, stop and consider buying them instead!
I was cutting 1-1/4" dados across 6"x8' boards (which would later be ripped into 1-1/4" strips)
I used a cross-cut sled with an 8' bed, and used my dado-stack at 3/4". Thus, each half-lap cut required two passes.
I made a wooden "key" which was exactly the width of my dado-blade and mounted it to the sled to the left of the blade.
For each 8' length, I carefully marked and cut the first 1-1/4" dado cutting to knife-marked lines and verified a snug fit.
Then, much like cutting box joints, I simply moved my workpiece over to the left each time, indexing off my pin.
But because each dado required two passes to get the 1-1/4" width, I'd first reference the left edge of the key against the left edge of the previous dado, then slide it over so the right edge of the key referenced the right side of the previous dado.
See image:
By all accounts that I can think of, this should have led to full repeatability. As long as my first dado was the right width, I'd expect all subsequent ones to be the same width, and same spacing.
But what I found was that somewhere, some small error was accumulating, and I'd get a few cuts into my 8' length and find that the width of my resulting 2-pass dado was getting greater and greater.. I'd adjust and keep going. (BIG MISTAKE- the first time I noticed this happening I should have done a full stop to figure out why.)
In the end, this progressive error meant that when it came time to fit together the half-lap lattice (4'x8' panels of it) they didn't just snap together like Lincoln Logs, rather, I had to tweak cuts and introduce gaps in the half-laps to make things fit. What a nightmare.
I was able to more or less correct the situation by ganging the parts together, and using the router and a dado-jig (which I probably should have done from the start, in hindsight) to cut new "best fit" and in the end, the panels look more or less fine. (it is a fence after all) and you really have to look closely for the gaps.
But I just can't wrap my head around how the setup would lead to progressively wider dados.. If the first dado was exactly 1-1/4" and the pin was exactly the width of the dado-stack then why would they get progressively wider??
PSA - If you are ever building a fence and decide to make a bunch of 8'x4' lattice panels by hand, stop and consider buying them instead!