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opolka
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Just set up a station similar to the one you described, and made strips out of 1x8 piece of redwood that I was given to me from a guy at work. It was so slick and easy! The strips are perfectly uniform. I set it all up on my strongback. I'll post some pics in my build thread but wanted to say thanks on this one for your tip.
I've ripped wood on a tablesaw a lot. And was dreading the 1/4" from my experience ripping other somewhat thin items (nothing as small as 1/4" though). This went so much smoother then those other projects. Great idea Jim!
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1JimD
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Glad you like the skilsaw method ! To me it's a NO BRAINER ! The uniformity is amazing !And that's what you need if you are building with bead and cove !
I'm setting up a new table for bead and cove. I post some pics that might be helpful.
Great weather for building !
Jim
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HighPlainsDrifter
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I used this method on my Ranger (the canoe build post is in here some time back). Excellent results almost ZERO waste. I first surface planed my wood, cut strips, and then beaded and coved.
You should number your strips as you take them off each plank. That way you can do a perfect color match as you strip each side.
Happy building
Here are a few pictures of my set up:
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1JimD
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I fasten the plank with a few finish nails. Very close to the edge, opposite of cutting. The best technic I've found, and the least expensive!
Jim
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opolka
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Thanks for sharing. Think I'm going this route.
Do you just hold the board you are cutting? Or do you utilize clamps?
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Rustycards
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Interesting! Thanks!
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1JimD
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Here is a pic of my strip cutting skilsaw, and strongback. The saw setup was less than $100 including a great Feud 24t Advanti blade. The strips are so uniform, they don't need planning before I bead and cove them.
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