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Seems to me to be a good idea if you are double careful about how much you have to remove with the planer.
And remember about the density of each species of wood when jointing. And whether the board is warped(needing more pressure).
Those concerns may just me being over cautious.
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don't miss steel on steel is bad JU JU
Quote:
Why would a warped board need more pressure than one that isn't? If you apply too much pressure you'll bend the board, negating the work done by the jointer.
And not enough will just let the stock ride up the knives.
I am not going to lie to you I have not used those type of push blocks well but once.
I hated them and now the only time I use anything it is a wooden push shoe like the larger one in a too large pic
Point being the position of your hands in the use of a jointer are at far less risk directly on the stock ( but not over the knives) than a couple of mediocre plastic blocks that can slip
If you want a grip surface figure out how to apply sandpaper to the block
Let us not seek the Republican Answer , or the Democratic answer. Let us not seek to fix the blame for the past. Let us accept our own responsibility for the future John F. Kennedy
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those stock plastic push blocks are pretty crappy. You can easily make better ones similar to what Joe posted (though his are pretty fancy). If you want friction, LV sells high friction material that you can stick on the bottom.
Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. - Philip K. Dick
Mark
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Cool. Thanks for the discussion.
I have a push block that has the heel on it, like the picture above. It's my go-to for my right hand when jointing.
Semper fi,
Brad