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Couldn't you just use a regular roundover bit and flip the piece over to complete the cut?
Still Learning,
Allan Hill
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not the one you pictured but the one I would want for setup ease
top bearing bits require a template to follow
this one uses the edge
HTH
Joe
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Hey Joe, That one is really nice! I am wondering if the bearing width might a little wide. The strips I am rounding are really narrow. (1/4")
JB
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(02-07-2017, 10:35 AM)AHill Wrote: Couldn't you just use a regular roundover bit and flip the piece over to complete the cut?
I might not get quite the shape I was looking for. The radius of the spline is fairly large so that there is a slight curvature that just stand proud of the the surface.
JB
"Give me an army of West Point graduates, I'll win a battle. Give me a handful of Texas Aggies and I'll win a war!"
--Gen. George S. Patton, Jr.
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(02-07-2017, 11:08 AM)32ojdidit Wrote: Hey Joe, That one is really nice! I am wondering if the bearing width might a little wide. The strips I am rounding are really narrow. (1/4")
did I misunderstand your application?
I was under the impression the band was in place and the entire edge was to be hit with the thumbnail bit/
The bearing is ~ 1/4" wide so if it is just the band well it will not work. In the same token no more than the bit you showed would change the profile on a 1/4" piece you could do as well with a handplane
and likely quicker
Now if you want a real bullnose radius
here is one
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My guess is he's running the piece before it's mounted, probably using a jig designed by Darrell Peart or something similar.
The desired profile is only part of a full bullnose. I've forgotten which bit I used but they're out there.
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Yes that is correct.
The Magnate site looks great. It looks like they have what I need.
Thanks again.
-John
JB
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Smaller profile, good for about 300 lineal feet then you buy anoother one, but entry to the dance is cheaper. Kinda depends if you plan to make much of it, or if you want smaller size.
MLCS has one too.
Might get about 200' here, before it's not too crisp anymore, but variety of sizes.
If price isn't an issue, these will last a few feet, plus you can resharpen I would take a model number and shop price, these look a tad high.
Allan's suggestion is also a good one. Once you find center line, all you need do is flip and send it back through on a round over bit. I think versus the bull nose if you wanted a shoulder it would be easier to do it with a round over and a 2 pass method.
Plenty of options out there.
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GW
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That's not a Whiteside unless it was done as a custom bit for somebody.
The coloring for some reason made me think Amana and they have bullnose bits with the bearing guide.
https://www.amanatool.com/products/route...s.html?p=2