(02-26-2021, 02:58 PM)GF SMITH Wrote: New to the forum and woodworking.
I am building a cedar chest and the lid (3/4" x 20" x 45" ) will be 4 boards 3/4" x 5" X 45" joined together on edge. I plan on using my new joiner for a good joint between the boards. My question is, how much wider do I cut the 5" of each board in order to use my joiner to ensure a good fit between the boards and remain at 20"?
Welcome to the forum.
Note: EDITED since first rushed post
The dreaded answer, "it depends." Are you relying on sizing boards to width, taking a single pass on the jointer (with no chance of more passes), and expecting the boards to glue up to final size? Or are you willing to trim it a bit to width after glue-up (<=== hint, I would totally do this).
If your boards are straight to begin with, then they will have to be oversized by your depth of cut, for each jointed edge. Are you jointing after a table saw cut? If not, and if you are using your jointer not just for a final pass, but to straighten your boards, then the answer depends on how much sideways curve your boards have.
Answer assuming you have basically straight boards to start with: set jointer for a very light cut. Find a straight piece of scrap, and edge-joint the first few inches of it, leaving the rest. Use a double square to find out the depth of cut. If you are confident in your technique and assume 1 cut per joined side, then the rest is just math (amount to oversize is depth of cut times the number of jointed edges).
If you have a table saw, or perhaps a band saw, or are adept with your longest hand plane, build the entire panel oversized by 1/4 inch, or whatever you are comfortable with, and trim the panel to size after you glue it. I can't imagine doing it any way but this.
Sorry for the long reply. One related thing. If you can manage it without tearout, flip every other edge around before you joint. That way, if your jointer is hair off of 90 degrees, the mating surfaces will compensate (one will be over 90 deg, the other under by the same amount).