04-21-2018, 07:58 PM
You may remember I bought a W&H molding machine a couple of months ago. Well, if you don't, I did. A couple of weeks ago I got a small job to make some baseboard and shoe molding, and window stool and casing, to match that in a 192X house, yellow pine for the varnished stuff and poplar where it will be painted.
The W&H molder is a very simple machine, so simple that you would never expect it can produce molding of such high quality. The knives are bolted onto the square arbor; no gibs, no depth setting, stupid simple and fast to install. Here's how it looks with the shoe molding knives.
The sides guides are just pieces of thin wood clamped to the spoil board, as needed, and relieved where the feed rollers interfere. Nothing fancy. The hood you see at the back is held on with a rod that fits through the front casting, also simple and fast.
So here it is running the shoe molding.
This piece is 9' long and my shop is so crowed with "stuff" that I had to open the door to have a 20' clear path. Dust collection is remarkably good.
Unless you have the multi-pass kit the W&H is designed to make full depth molding in one pass, or a bulk pass and then a finish pass 1/32" deeper, which is how I ran this molding.
To make the baseboard molding I had to have a new knife fabricated. I got these from Custom Molding Knives in Shaftsbury, VT. Great service. $141 or these. It's a 3/8" radius then a 1-7/8" flat and then another 3/8" radius. You plane your stock to final thickness and rip it to width first, then run it through the molder. I sanded the wood on the wide flat portion of this board, but the molded portion is not sanded, that's how it looks straight off the molder.
Here's a photo of a piece of yellow pine baseboard, shoe molding, and another piece similar to the baseboard molding that is the trim under the window stool.
This was a nice little job to get my feet wet running molding, less than 100 feet of each. It's rather fun, but the long pieces make it obvious that I need to clean some wood out of my shop if I want to do much of it.
John
The W&H molder is a very simple machine, so simple that you would never expect it can produce molding of such high quality. The knives are bolted onto the square arbor; no gibs, no depth setting, stupid simple and fast to install. Here's how it looks with the shoe molding knives.
The sides guides are just pieces of thin wood clamped to the spoil board, as needed, and relieved where the feed rollers interfere. Nothing fancy. The hood you see at the back is held on with a rod that fits through the front casting, also simple and fast.
So here it is running the shoe molding.
This piece is 9' long and my shop is so crowed with "stuff" that I had to open the door to have a 20' clear path. Dust collection is remarkably good.
Unless you have the multi-pass kit the W&H is designed to make full depth molding in one pass, or a bulk pass and then a finish pass 1/32" deeper, which is how I ran this molding.
To make the baseboard molding I had to have a new knife fabricated. I got these from Custom Molding Knives in Shaftsbury, VT. Great service. $141 or these. It's a 3/8" radius then a 1-7/8" flat and then another 3/8" radius. You plane your stock to final thickness and rip it to width first, then run it through the molder. I sanded the wood on the wide flat portion of this board, but the molded portion is not sanded, that's how it looks straight off the molder.
Here's a photo of a piece of yellow pine baseboard, shoe molding, and another piece similar to the baseboard molding that is the trim under the window stool.
This was a nice little job to get my feet wet running molding, less than 100 feet of each. It's rather fun, but the long pieces make it obvious that I need to clean some wood out of my shop if I want to do much of it.
John