pathfinder
Transcription
pathfinder
® THE WoodRat PATHFINDER™ The Pathfinder™ is a system of plates that works as an accessory to the WoodRat WR5, the LittleRat LR1, the current WR900 and the WR600. It’s made up of the Pathfinder Parts, the MitreBox MB3 and one of a series of Templates. What it will produce will depend on the type of Template used. 1 Contents Introduction Before you begin parts not included in the Pathfinder The Pathfinder™ MitreBox MB3 Pathfinder Parts The Templates Tenons Set up for Tenons Making the tenon Making the mortise Dovetails Set-up for Dovetails Symmetrical Dovetails: the Tail sockets Test Pins Run of Pins Asymmetrical Dovetails Grooving Half Blind or Lapped Dovetails Set-up Making classic drawers Tail sockets Test pins Run of Pins The Blank Template 2 Introduction to the Pathfinder™ A few years ago certain companies began producing Mortise and Tenon jigs to simplify the process of making mortise and tenon joints and at the same time to solve the problem inherent in routing with a round bit, which is that it makes round ended mortises – the proverbial square peg in the round hole. This niggled at us too, but having the WoodRat as a starting point, the direction it took us surprised us by producing not only a foolproof way of cracking out tenons, but it also led on to a whole variety of joints – tenons, through dovetails and half-blind dovetails and all sorts of shapes and so on, each ve Moreover it was all based on familiar WoodRat technology. The one thing that it did not produce was an easy way of making mortises. But then mortises are traditionally made in a very separate way from tenons, and our solution for them, the MR4 Mortise Rail, has also led us to a lot of other ways of making many interesting things. I hope you get great pleasure from the Pathfinder as well as finding it useful. It is still in the experimental stage and the invitation is there for you to join us in discovering innovative ways to use it. Keep in touch. 3 PARTS LIST PARTS FOR THE PATHFINDER™ Pf1 The Pathfinder™ uses the WoodRat MitreBox MB3 to hold the workpieces plus several new components (Pathfinder Parts) that enable it to track the pathways in the Templates. Templates come in a variety of patterns depending on the joint or component to be made. The WR600, WR5 and the WR900 3142 Guiderail Right : 1. Pathfinder Parts Half plate make a suitable platform for the Pathfinder. Use your Alu GuideRails and Router Plate RP3 (with new hole configuration) and raising plate if necesary. Older GuideRails need an extra counterbored M4 hole, and you will need to drill and tap older Router Plates or buy a new RP3 Router Plate. The new Ali Fences are ideal for firming up the MitreBox. 6541 Starknob Halfplate Drop-Pin Plate Drop pin Bracket M6 Locking screws x4 M8 20 x2 Drop Pin M6 Locking screw x2 2. MiterBox MB3 Drop-Pin Plate 6461 Routerplate 3141 Guiderail Left 3316 Raising Plate Use your Raising Plates if needed for extra depth for tenons Right-hand M8 Self-tapping inserts Left hand Cheek Right hand Cheek M4 16 x 4 M4 nuts x 4 Rod Clamp components 5424 Locking Lever 5421 Lobed Washer M10 nuts x 4 M10 washers x 5 300mm threaded Rod x 2 M8 self tapping inserts x 2 M8 nut 5512 Rubber washer x 2 Rod Lock 5424 Locking Lever M8 nut M8 50 Spreader Rod 6mm Hex key 4262 Aluminium Fence 6421 Lobed Washer Left-hand Cheek Attaches to the Left hand Cheek to secure the MitreBox. M6 Locking key x 2 5616 M4 16 Aluminum Bracket 5684 4M Nut 3. Pathfinder Templates There are a growing selection of Templates for a wide variety of tasks. They can be made to order. Tenon Template Through DovetailsTemplate Half-blind Dovetail Template Although we will try to advertise any item changes in good time, in the interest of continuous improvement in the quality and value of our products, WoodRat reserve the right to change components in colour, function and material without prior warning. 4 Before you begin Some parts are not part of the Pathfinder, as they are now a standard part of the WoodRat kit. They can be bought separately from your WoodRat dealer if you need them. 1. The Aluminium Fences We have recently introduced new Aluminium Fences to replace the earlier moulded nylon ones. Firm and square enough for ordinary purposes, they are well worth having for Pathfinder work as they allow you firmly to attach the Left hand Cheek to the Sliding Bar to form the MitreBox MB3. 5616 M4 16 5684 4M Nut The aluminium fence has two tee-slots that will hold the left-hand cheek firm and square to the sliding bar. The Fence has two tee slots in it so that the Left hand Cheek can be bolted to it with four M4 16 screws to hold it firm and exactly square. A third tee-slot behind the finger grip takes the Big Cursor. This is not generally of use with the templates which have their own way of registering where the cuts are to come. The ali fences come with wooden faces that allow you to add sandpaper to stop the wood slipping. Do not sandpaper the aluminium Fence direct. But now take off the Ali Fence. Take off the Plywood Face and store it, before you put the Left Cheek into the tee-slots of the Sliding Bar. The M4 16 screws go into cheek. The nuts go on loosely and the Cheek is slid into the tee-slot of the Sliding Bar The Fence is slid upwards onto the nuts before being screwed to the Bar, and the M4 screws tightened. 2. Ali GuideRails: You will need your WoodRat or LittleRat GuideRails. Note that there is an extra M4 threaded hole in the HalfPlate. If your GuideRails do not have corresponding holes, you will need to drill them 4mm counterbored to 8mm to house the head of the M4 10 screw. These extra screws stop the routerplate from twisting the rails out of true, and hold everything firm on the Half Plate. 3. The New RP3 RouterPlate has 6 x 6mm tapped holes that take the locking keys for the Drop-pin plate. If you have an old routerplate and you are not confident at drilling and tapping, it might be best to buy a new RP3. The guiderails have an extra pair of counterbored 4mm holes to take an M410 to attach it to the half-plate Otherwise the RP3 is similar to the RP2 routerplate except that is has two extra tapped M8 holes for attaching fences of different types to the underside of the Plate. This allows you to use the Router for freehand work without taking the router off the Plate. You have the advantage of a larger base for the router, plus the ability to make a fence that suits the job in hand: 8mm deep for running against an 8mm straight edge laid across a sheet of material or, for example, deeper for moulding the edge of a table, for example. The router plate has three pairs of M6 holes to take the Drop-pin plate 5 Setting up the Pathfinder™ The Pathfinder™ Pf1 comes in three parts. They can be bought separately, or bundled together. If you have an MB3 MitreBox you will need only the Pathfinder Parts and a Template to begin wo. Most of the actions and techniques such as the tracking, holding wood in the CamLocks, using the raising plates, plunging and depthing the router, will be familiar to anyone who knows the WoodRat, but if you are new to it, you will find it helpful to read the Manual that comes with your basic machine, and put in some practice. The workings of the Pathfinder itself are mostly self-evident. Tenons are a breeze and Through Dovetails are not too difficult, but the Half-Blinds are so quick in operation that it is well worth the initial mental effort. It’s even worth following the instructions. Drop Pin M6 Locking Key M6 Locking Key Drop Pin Plate 1. The Pathfinder™ Parts The first part of the Pathfinder is what we call the ‘Pathfinder Parts’. These need to work with the MB3 MitreBox to complete the Pf1 Pathfinder™. 1.1. The Halfplate The BasePlate of the WoodRat is replaced for Pathfinder work by the HalfPlate. The front edge of the Halfplate has a groove that takes the tongue cut into edge of all the Templates which interlock with it and can slide east/west with no north/south movement. Use the M8 25 screws that come as standard with the WoodRat kit. Raising Plates Loosen the HalfPlate and add Raising Plates under it as necessary to give more depth of cut. The Raising Plate (or plates) come as standard with the WoodRat kit, to allow a greater depth of cut when needed for tenons. It uses the M8 25 or M8 50 screws which come standard with the WoodRat kit. Plus the M4 10 screws to hold the GuideRail to the Halfplate. 1.2 Drop-pin Plate The new RP3 RouterPlate is largely the same as the older Plate but is modified to take the Drop Pin Plate. This fits into its tee slot and is held either side by M6 10 Locking Keys. Its position can be adjusted north/south in the RouterPlate, and it can be locked down. It determines the distance between the Pin as it wanders around the template and the Bit as it cuts the workpiece. It governs the distance between the Bit and Pin. The Drop Pin The Drop Pin has a sprung pin that can be raised and kept up, or dropped down to engage with the grooves, islands, wedges and pathways in the Template. So, as the Template and with it the Workpiece is tracked west/east, the Pin, and with it the Bit, can go north/south. So in effect, the pin finds its way around any useful kind of Pathway cut in the template allowing the bit to travel a similar kind of pathway in the workpiece; hence the name Pathfinder™. 6 Make sure that you have the 4mm counterbored hole here. 1.3. The Bracket This attaches to the Left Hand Cheek of the MitreBox MB3. The Cheek must be fitted with two M8 brass inserts which take the two M8 25’s. They go through the two vertical slots, allowing the Bracket, and the Template with it, to be raised up under the Guiderails when the Raising Plate is in use. The Bracket also has two open slots which take the M6 Locking Keys screwed into the Template. The keys, when loose, can slide in the slots and can be positioned and tightened up, so that the Template, sliding in the groove in the HalfPlate may be tracked east/west under the RouterPlate, This east/west adjustment of Template on the Bracket governs the way the joints are laid onto the workpiece. M8 Self-tapping inserts M8 nut M8 50 6mm Hex key 1.4. The Brass Inserts There are two brass inserts that need to be wound into the two holes at the top of the left Cheek. they can be driven in with a large screwdriver, but it is simpler to use a long M8 socket head cap screw. If you just use the screw, put the insert on it, and wind it in with the hex key, you might find that the insert jams on the screw and unscrews when you wind the screw out again. A nut on the screw, then the insert, before winding it in will prevent this happening. Make sure that it winds in straight. Recently we have been placing the inserts for you. 2. The MitreBox MB3 This is the second part of the Pathfinder™ There are differences between the setups needed for the different Templates, but this is the basic system: 2.1. The Left Cheek of the MB3 attaches to the Ali Fence. It is placed first with its ‘toes’ in the big tee-slot of the Sliding Bar. The four M4 16 screws are put into the four counter-bored holes in the Cheek with the M4 nuts placed loosely: the Fence is slid upward taking the nuts into the two tee-slots and the Fence is screwed to the Sliding Bar with the M8 countersunk screws in the usual way. Before the four M4 16’s are tightened fully, pull the Fence forward and push the Cheek gently but firmly against the Machine Face to take out any slack in the Bar. For most work with the Pathfinder you only need the Left Cheek. When you do need the Right Cheek, you’ll need the RodLock to hold it all firmly, as a Box. Set up the parts of the Pathfinder as the diagram. For the WoodRat, use the right-hand CamLock. The LR1 and WR600 have only one gate, but the process is exactly the same. Some people buy an extra fence so that it can be kept permanently with the left cheek. 2.2. The Right Cheek The right-hand cheek is the thinner one. You’ll not need it for the tenons or for through dovetails: only later, for half-blind dovetails, and for mitred work generally. The cheeks are made of HDF which is brittle, but can be drilled, worked and added to. The WoodRat manual gives a lot of hints on how to use the MitreBox for many other uses than simply working at 45° angles 7 2.3. The Rod Lock The threaded rods and how they are used is covered in a later section on Half-blind Dovetails. 3. The Templates The third essential part of the Pathfinder™ is the Template. These plates have a shaped long edge that interlocks with the Half-plate. They each have a way of being screwed to slots in the Bracket, using M6 Locking Keys from below. 3.1. The Tenon Template works with straight bits: 8mm 10mm and Half inch. It will make Twin and Single and Double Twin tenons in a range of lengths. The tenons can be made round or square ended. It will also make dowels. This technique complements mortises made in the MR4 Mortice Rail. Rod Lock 3.2. Through Dovetail Plates Each plate makes classic through dovetails of fixed pitch but for a range of sizes of dovetail bit. 5424 Locking Lever Spreader Rod 6421 Lobed Washer 3.3. The Half-Blind Dovetail Template is the fastest way to joint drawers. Each Template has two different pitches for the same size of WoodRat dovetail bit. This Template and the correct bit have to be used together. 3.4. There is also a Blank Template You can cut out any shape in 3mm sheet acrylic and make from it any wooden shape you wish. Any kind of shape that can be devised in the template can cut a similar shape in the wood. The pathway might make stars, animal shapes for a Noah’s Ark, or a line of multiple Santa Clauses. More practically, circles or squares will make inter-locking lids and boxes. You will need to experiment with different sized bits and different thicknesses of wall for the drop-pin to run against. 8 Working with the Pathfinder Preparation However well the WoodRat parts are finished, your Pathfinder parts, plates and sliding bar, will need to be thoroughly waxed and polished before work can begin. The whole mechanism must run like silk. When the Template is added it needs to be locked in so that there is the minimum of movement when the pin is dropped, for instance, in the centre hole in the tenon template. You will need to check that the router plate runs smoothly fore and back and that there is no sideways slap between plate and guiderails. It might be necessary to take everything apart to ensure that all sliding parts are as slick as can be. Holding the work Locking a rail in the Camlock is the same as for general WoodRat work, you need to pull with your fingers and push with your thumb as you clamp in the work, to take out any slack in the sliding bar, and make sure it’s firmly seated. Bring up the Camlock, and lock in a scrap rail, making sure that the Bar tracks nicely west/east.... and that the Router runs smoothly north/south: if necessary, wax all rubbing surfaces. Take out any lateral movement between GuideRails and RouterPlate. d Simple strips of sandpaper are quite adequate to hold the wood vertical, horizontal and at angles. Sandpaper your faces: to give some friction to the inner faces of the Cheeks, we recommend that you sandpaper the faces. Use impact adhesive, pasted on both surfaces and allowed to dry before bonding the two surfaces together: this makes for very durable non-slip surfaces to hold the work. Alternatively use a rubber cement (Copydex) that does not last for ever, but which can be peeled off and replaced more easily. Use around a 120 grit and trim round the Cheeks with a sharp knife. Dust Extraction Ensure that you have good strong dust extraction, particularly for the harmful fine dust. Note: LR1 LittleRat users can use the new RP3 RouterPlate for all normal LittleRat work except variably spaced half-blind dovetails. Either revert to your LittleRat router plate or invest in a HalfBlind Dovetail Template and use the Pathfinder™. The Bracket The Alu bracket is set by screwing two M8 20 screws into the brass inserts. Do not tighten the screws you have set the Template, and raised it up under the guiderails. The slots allow you to raise the Template when Raising Plates are in use. Check your router for run out. Make a test cut with a straight bit in some hardwood scrap to check that a socket made with a 10mm bit is indeed cutting 10 mm wide. If it is cutting large, check that there is no slack between the guiderails and routerplate. If there is still serious run-out and you are using a quick release chuck, re-insert your original collet and try again. If there is still run-out, you have a problem with the router. if not, you have a problem with the quick release chuck. In which case undo the chuck and turn it a quarter turn and retighten, and test again. This may improve the seating. If you cannot improve it, let us know. 9 A collection of tenons made during the experimental stages of developing the Pathfinder. The collection comprises tenons double tenons and dowels and stars made with a star shape placed in the blank template 10 Using the Tenon Template Aluminium guiderails allow the router to cut the work on the axis north/south The Drop-pin in the Drop-pin plate follows around the ‘islands’ in the Template, as the Bit cuts the workpiece under the plate The half-plate holds the Template as it slides East/West The Tenon template allows the work to move east/west depending on the drop-pin controling the Bracket is raised so as to lift the Template up under the half-plate position of the router. With this Left Cheek of the MB3 mitreBox only is used for makingTenons Template it makes round ended tenons – double and twin, and also dowels. Pathfinder Tenons – either single or double – are ver y straight for ward. The Template forms not only round ended tenons of various useful sizes, but also dowels at the extreme left, and a long tenon that can be used for square ended tenons with haunches at the extreme right of the plate. Introducing the Tenon Template. Polish all sliding surfaces so that everything slides easily when it should, or locks down firmly when it needs to be firm. Look at the rail end, and check it against the islands to decide whether you need twin or single, or single or double tenons. Or double twins. Use the left-hand Cheek only. Place one 25mm/1” or two 12mm 1/2” Raising Plates under the HalfPlate to give you up to 50mm/2” depth of cut. Decide which bit you are going to use for your mortises, and therefore the tenon size. The Template will make your tenons either 8mm, 10mm or half inch, so your mortises will be either 8, 10 or half inch. The Tenon Template has four lines of Islands – in two pairs of two, each pair starts with circles and ends with long islands. The top line of each pair is for single tenons; twins are made using both lines. As the Template is designed to make the tenon fit the mortise, you can make the tenons first. This has advantages over making the mortises first, as we shall see. Decide how long you need your tenon by matching the rail end with an Island. At it’s simplest a single tenon will go in the centre of the rail, but you can place it where needed. A The tenon Template is designed to make tenons that fit mortises cut by an 8mm, 10mm or a half inch (12.7mm) bit. 11 twin tenon will have the socket between the tenons placed central. To get the length of tenon, place your work-piece against the islands to check which to use, but note that the actual size of the tenon is 2mm or so inside the island. Put a pencil mark on the Island you are using so you can find it when it’s under the plate. With the upper pair of lines, use an 8mm straight bit to make a 10mm tenon, or a 10mm bit, to make an 8mm tenon. With the lower pair of lines, use a 10mm bit to cut a 1/2” (12.7mm) tenon, or a 1/2” (12.7mm) bit to cut a 10mm tenon. Select a bit to make the tenon you want and place it in the collet. Screw the Template to the Bracket loosely, and track it under the Router Plate, threading the Template over the supporting groove in the HalfPlate and under the GuideRails. Lift the Template and Bracket gently up under the GuideRails and tighten the M8 20 screws on the Bracket. It should track west/east freely, so make sure that it does. The Drop-pin Plate The Drop Pin screws into the Drop Pin Plate. Place the DropPin Plate in the RouterPlate: screw in a 6mm Locking Key loosely either side. See how the plate will slide north/south when loose, and lock down when the screws are tightened. By placing the screws in one of the three pairs of holes, the pin can cover a distance fore and back across the Template. Lift the Pin, making sure that it moves freely over the template. Note that the cutter is free to cut at random into any work-piece placed in the CamLock when the Pin is raised. So raise the Bit. Get into the habit of raising the bit after each run of cuts. Drop the Pin and see how its travel is limited by the Islands of the Template. Track the Crank Handle as you move the router forward and back and see practice running around the Islands in the Template. Cross hairs find the centre of the rail end Marking the rail end Mark up the end of the rail with two centre lines, the east/ west (x-axis) and the north/south (y-axis) line... and cam it in place. Note that there‘s no need to find the exact centre, as you can make two lines, one from each face, rather than fuss about finding the centre. Set your cutting gauge to roughly a half and make two lines one from each face. One blade of the Bit will later line up with one, and the other blade with the other cut line, and the Bit will be exactly centered. If you have sharp eyes or alternatively good 3 diopter specs, this method will be extremely accurate. The Bit finds the middle of the rail, while the Pin finds the centre of the Island north/south Note that the centre of the tenon might not need to be central to the rail. It will depend on your design. Two lines give the centre line when using a bit with two blades Locating the Template Place the two M6 Locking Keys, in the correct holes for the required Island. Note that the locking key holes are found two places away to the left of the island you are using (the one you marked up earlier). Slide the Template so that the Locking Keys engage in the open Bracket slots. Tighten them temporarily, and track the Bracket and Template under the GuideRails and Router Plate. Your marked-up Island will appear under the DropPin as the crossed lines on the Rail end appear under the bit, but not yet lined up. Now locate the Drop Pin in the hole in the Tenon Island (the exact center of the Island). 12 east/west line When the Pin is in the centre of the Island you can line up both axes on the cross hairs. The Channel GuideRails The half-plate which is screwed to the Channel engages with the Template, which moves with the workpiece. Router Plate with Drop-Pin Plate with Pin engaging in the Template. Lift the Pin and the router is free The Tenon Template The Template slides east/west in the groove in the Half-Plate. The Drop Pin in its plate controls the action north/south of the router. In effect you run round the template Islands with the Drop Pin which describes the shape of the island on the tail end. Slacken the Template’s M6 Locking Keys, and track the rail, to centre the blades of the bit (set north/south) to align with the y-axis lines. Tighten the screws. This positions the tenon east/west on the rail end. 2. Locating the DropPin Plate Loosen the DropPin Plate on the RouterPlate and move the Bit so that the blades line up with the horizontal lines on the rail end, then tighten the thumbscrews. You’re now aligned north/south (on the x-axis). The pin is still in the hole, so raise the pin. This frees the router bit, so un-plunge the router at the same time. The Pin goes into the hole in the Island, the Template’s Locking Keys are slackened. The Bit lines up on the centre line of the rail end, and the Keys tightened. Make it a habit: raise the router and the pin every time you finish a joint. Then you can’t harm anything. The Z-axis Make sure you have enough depth of cut. Slide in a raising plate as necessary. Your rail will be marked out with the size between the stiles and cut with adequate length of tenon at either end. So when you place the rail beneath the plate you will be able to drop the bit to the inside line of the door or frame. No zeroing the bit this time. 13 If you work from an exact centre line, both your tenons will be of equal length. They may be too long but you can cut them down later. If too short, you will need longer rails. Cutting the Tenon Drop the bit and with the pin up and the bit down, you’re set to go. You can now cut anywhere, so be careful. Cut clockwise all around the rail to clean the shoulder of the tenon. This without the pin hitting the Island. It is just to skim the outside of the rail to make a clean shoulder all round. Now drop the Pin and continue to cut the tenon clockwise. The Pin wheel will now hit and run around the Island and describe the outline of the tenon on the rail end at the same time. Go gently and take your time. With a little practice, you’ll find the best track to take, and will develop your own techniques for maximum speed and a perfect finish. Go for finish first and speed later. Nothing much can go wrong. If you find that the cutter is cutting into the tenon, check that your locking pins are reasonably tight: the plate or the template can come loose, but shouldn’t. Be sure you are aware when the Bit is up and harmless, and when down and meaning business, and when the Pin is up and the bit not controlled by the template and when down and only cutting where you need it. Now the Pin Plate’s Locking Keys are slackened. The Pin stays in the hole, but the Bit is brought forward to line up with the horizontal line. Repeat for the tenon on the other end by cart-wheeling the rail (the face side kept always against the machine face)... and then the next, and so on. Twin Tenons Twins are made by running around the two twin islands together on the one rail. The centering method is a little bit different: Slacken the DropPin Plate Locking Screws. The y-axis alignment is done with the pin in the center hole as before. But the centreline of the joint north/south is given by placing the pin central between the Islands, and aligning the blades of the bit on the y-axis lines. The bit cuts round the tenon as the Pin rolls around the island. 14 1. the rail is marked up with “cross-hairs” and tracked under the plate, and the bit is centred on them. The halfplate is shown partly translucent 3. With the template loose, the pin is moved up to the centre hole of the island, and the template moved so that the pin will fall in to it. Tighten the locking keys 2. the drop pin is loosened, and taken to between the islands and the keys tightened. 4. Now drop pin and cutter, and cut the twin tenons in the same way as single tenons. Layout for twin tenons using the bottom pair of lines of islands, and the sequence for centering the tenons on the rail. Double Twins You can make double twin tenons if you don’t mind one pair of twins being a little longer than the other. This can be useful for placing a lock in the center rail. Dowels Dowels are very short round ended tenons, so they are made in the same way as tenons, either single or twin. Note that they have the advantage that one end of the dowel is integral and need not be glued. The tenon is in the rail and stile is drilled to fit it, making a stronger joint. Note that the dowel can be made in anything... squares or hexagonal pieces or twigs with bark on. Note also that the bit does not have to be straight. You can put nice finials on things with a cove or fancy cutter of any kind. Gluing up Tip. If you make too good a job of fitting the mortises to the tenons, you could find that when you glue up and cramp the pieces together, air, trapped in the joint, compresses and shoots the joint apart again like an air gun when the clamping pressure is released. After making the tenon and before taking it out of the Camclamp, raise the Drop pin and just touch the tenon with the bit, to make an airway. This is quicker than doing it with a chisel. 15 Haunched Tenons for Cupboard Doors When making cupboard doors you can simply use the largest tenon island, and run the cuts off both edges of the rail without rounding either. Mark out the centre lines of your rail as described earlier. Make the two cuts, trimming the shoulders, going clockwise with the Pin down. Then raise the Bit by a gauged amount to make the haunch. This means unlocking and raising the router itself and lowering the Bit onto the gauging piece and locking it again. Do not reset the depthing foot, just lift the router. Raise the Pin and cut across to make the haunch on one end. Cartwheel the Rail and tenon the other end. Make sure you haunch the correct end of the tenon. Bit up Pin up safe position Bit up Pin down: dry run as the pin follows the template Bit down Pin down safe cutting as pin follows template Bit down Pin up Watch out! Pin not in control Marking out for making a box This is a time-honoured method for keeping the parts of a project in their proper places and being able to tell which part is which when they are disassembled on the bench. Place the pieces together in the position that they will occupy in the project: the two drawer sides facing away from you, for example, and the ends across them, as you might find them in a chest of drawers. Put them together and draw an arrow across the top edges. The arrows point away from you. You will then be able to see at a glance which is the top edge and which the left side and which the right, and which is the inside and which the outside of the box. Later you will then be able to see which Side goes with which End to make a corner. Understanding this, you will never need to get lost again. The two sides, collected together and marked with arrows pointing the four pieces orientated as they are in the project with the broken arrows still pointing away from you If you have two or more drawers, you can draw a second or third line under the arrow, or on the right hand edge of the arrow head. It’s simple but effective. Making a box with continuous grain Take a thick plank and re-saw it. The trick is to turn the plank inside out so that the continuous inside marking is on the outside. Mark up the parts as shown, taking note of which is Side (the long pieces)) and which is End (the shorter pieces). When rightly orientated, the arrows will point away as shown earlier. Mark up the boards with mitres the arrows give you the inside and the upside of each piece the four pieces orientated as they are in the project with the broken arrows still pointing away from you: the two sides, collected together and marked with arrows pointing away from you. 16 the arrows give you the inside and the upside of each piece Dovetailing using the TD Templates For all those who have been perplexed by the workings of the WoodRat’s normal dovetailing method, this is an idiot-proof Dovetail Jig that never-the-less uses the WoodRat range of fine 1in7 bits and produces perfect results. It’s dovetailing for the rest of us. Set up for Dovetails Start with the dovetail sockets: To test the Template, you could make a simple box. You will need a pair of boards for the box sides and a pair for the ends. Make all the boards the same width, but the shorter pair will be the ends and the longer pair will be the sides. You need only the left-hand Cheek, the Bracket, one CamLock, and one of the Through Dovetail Templates for through dovetails. As always, through dovetails are made with the angled (dovetail) bit going straight through the work, with the straight bit cutting at angles to make the pins. Mark them up with triangle marks as shown (on page 14) so that you don’t get lost and end up with a Z instead of a ring of dovetails. In other words, the angled bit goes straight and the straight bit goes angled. The bit Choose a dovetail bit for the sides that is your next size larger than the thic ness of the end or pin pieces. So between the square Islands are for the tail sockets, with the Pin running straight in the alleys between the Islands.... Note that you can match the bit size closely to the wood thickness, if you have a good selection of WoodRat dovetail bits. whereas the Pins are made with the wheel running down the sides of the angled wedges with the straight bit in charge. 17 You can also plane your wood down if it is too thick for the bit that you want to use. Tails first You cut all the tails first because you can adjust the pin size to fit later if you need to. There’s not much you can do to a row of tail sockets. Select a Dovetail Template. Screw in the two M6 thumbscrews. Tighten gently and locate it exactly later (see below). What size is the wood? The width of the wood: With any kind of jig you need to size the work to fit the jig’s fixed pitch. This is the downside of having the speed and easy working of this particular template. The Pathfinder™ Through Dovetail TD Template has a fixed pitch, but you can use different sizes of dovetail bit, and have therefore a lot of alternatives of wood thickness at that same pitch. The Bit is place on the central pin. The Two Locking Keys of the Template are loosed and the Template freed so that the Drop Pin can go between the Islands. The keys are tightened. That locates the Template. As the sockets get larger, in thicker wood, so the pitch gets tighter, to a point where it looks camped and needs a wider pitch. Then use a larger TD Template. Making a symmetrical layout Use the Template to show you where your joints are going to come on the board end. It’ll show you how many pins you will have, and whether you should narrow the boards to avoid oversized end pins. Find the center line of the board end. When the board is symmetrical the line will be in the middle of an island or exactly between two, depending on wheth er you have an odd or an even number of pins. Positioning the Tails Place one piece for tails in the CamLock. Make sure that the inside is facing you. The Drop Pin goes between the Islands to make the tail sockets. 1. Zero the cutter: raise the bit and then zero it onto the top of the board. Place the Bit so that it is positioned over the middle of the board. Depth the depthing fo t against the piece for pins The Dovetail template is held by the Bracket and slides 2. Loosen the Drop-pin plate (you might have to relocate the under the Guide Rails. The Drop Pin traces the Tail sockLocking Keys to a different pair of holes), and bring the drop-pin ets by going through between the Islands using a Doveforward to about the middle of the line of square islands. tail Bit and then traces the pins by going down the slope of the wedges on either side. 3. Tighten the DropPin Locking Keys. Track the board so that the centre line is precisely under the bit. Loosen the keys on the Template. Even Sockets Drop the Pin and slide the plate so that the pin drops onto the middle of the middle Island, or in the alley between the two middle Islands. That should now put the run of pins/sockets central to the board. Now lift the Pin, so you can track the dovetail bit to the left-hand edge of the board. Then run to the other end of the board and check that the board is indeed central and the same both ends with not too big a pin at either end. Odd Sockets Drop the Pin and slide the plate so that it goes between the islands. Depth the Bit Zero the bit back onto the board end and use the pin piece to gauge the depth of cut. Drop the bit, and you are ready to cut the tails. Cutting the Tail Sockets Do this carefully: because the cut is guided, you can cut from both faces of the tail board, front first and then from the back. This will ensure that there’s no breakout, specially if you go gently and your bit is sharp. The end pins need special treatment as you will need to trim the edges before cutting the exact socket position. On the left edge go away (clockwise) around the board. You have space for this. On the right-hand edge come forward. You may need to lift the 18 8 does 8,10,12. The Bit is placed over the board end and the Drop Pin plate loosened and brought up to the middle of the Islands. The Drawing shows the wood tracked out left to show the position of the Pin and the Bit and the work in the CamLock, and the Template reatiative to the Bracket and Fence. Pin and cut forward (clockwise again) making a half cut (trim cut) on the edge of the board. Put the router back and drop the DropPin again before making a full cut down the alley between the islands. Breakout When making sockets, there is little breakout if you trim cut from the front and then go round and make the full cut from the back of the board. If the boards are thin, you can cut them both at once, but it’s probably best to do them one at a time, carefully, at first. Select the pieces for grain and character and mark out which piece goes where – whether Side (long) or End (short). The triangle marking method is very useful to keep the boards in order. The following is a way of keeping the sockets and the pins exactly matched up corner for corner. Put the two tail boards together, in the left hand, ready to go in the CamLock, with the arrow pointing upward. Somersault the front board. Now they have both inside faces facing you. Keeping that orientation, lock the back board in the CamLock and cut the row of top left sockets. Next the bottom right corner sockets of the front board, which is now ‘upside down’ and at the top, because you flipped the board. The larger Pins look more crowded on the board end, but it is a matter of opinion when they look wrong. At the smaller end of the scale, the pins could look too widely spaced, and need a Template with a tighter pitch. Put the boards together (don’t change the orientation) and cartwheel the boards together. That is, look at them and wheel them through 180°. Note: The Sides will now match up with the Ends with the pin when they are rotated in this way. The pins have to have the thicker part always facing the machine, and have to be cart-wheeled between cutting one end and the other. Now do bottom left corner sockets trim cutting from the front and then cutting from the back that is from the outside to the inner face 19 and then repeat for the top right corner. Remember: 1. Put them together and flip the front board. and cut both rows together. 2. Cartwheel them both together and cut the other two. and that’s the Tails done. Making the Test Pins DO NOT FORGET TO DO THIS... ...before you leave the tails, take a piece of good scrap a little wider than the width of two sockets and cam it in place under the bit which is brought forward to cutting position (off). Push the router away, and squeeze the scrap up a fraction. Cam it in again, and switch on. Bring the router forward so that the bit cuts a shallow groove in the top of the scrap. Cut the first pin position, and then the second making two shallow grooves. It gives you both the bottom dimension and positions of the first two tails. Keep the Test Stick in place and... Making the pins ...change the dovetail bit for a straight bit. The larger the better (less break-out), but it must fit easily between the pins, and also be right for the Template. We will check that next. You now use the wedge shaped Islands on the template, Raise the Pin. Now track the Bit to the back edge of the test stick on the right hand side of the groove so that the left blade is just touching the right hand edge of the groove. Unlock the Pin Plate (Pin down) and move it up so that the Pin comes up against the wedge. Lock the Drop Pin Plate. Track the Bit to the other side of the groove and align the right hand blade with the left edge of the groove. The Pin should come up and hit the wedge on the left just as it did on the right-hand side. The dovetail bit cuts two grooves to trace the bit diameter on the stick at first and second socket positions If the Pin runs off the top end of the wedge, when the Bit is placed, the bit is too small to hit the wedge so change the bit for a larger diameter straight bit and start the test again: loosen the drop pin plate and pull the plate forward allowing you to place this larger bit on the edge of the groove. Slide the pin away till it nudges the wedge.... and tighten the keys on the Drop Pin. Test the other side and check that the blade comes to the edge of the groove. Do this without moving the sliding bar. Dry Run Before cutting the test stick, check that as you run the Pin down the Wedge either side, the bit will run across the groove from top right and down at a slope of 1 in 7 to make a pin with the base the same size as the groove which is the same size as the dovetail bit. Check that it runs over the stick the other side also. Making the Pins in the Test Stick Now cut the test stick proper. Zero the cutter onto the scrap and gauge the bit depth using the piece with the dovetails cut in it. Drop the bit, Track to the left hand edge of the Stick. Switch on and make a right-hand cut, from the right side, just kissing the corner of the groove sloping down towards the left, The first pin will allow a right hand cut only. Track to position number 2, and make a right-hand cut and then a left-hand cut, from top left side down towards the bottom right. Be sure to clean the space between the pins. Don’t worry about breakout until later. The test stick should fit the first and second sockets on the board with the sockets. And the two should line up on the left. 20 The bit is at the back of the Stick just at the edge of the groove. Slide the Pin up to the wedge till it gently nudges it, and tighten the Locking Pins on the Drop-pin Plate A right hand cut If it’s too tight, move the Pin Plate towards you, so that it uses a thinner part of the wedge. If it is too thin, move it up the wedge to thicken the Pin a fraction. Try the test on the other end of the stick. The Bit is placed at the edge of the groove, with the Pin up Making the Run of Pins Now try the run of pins for real. It helps to place the board with the tail sockets in it, handy, so you can see what you are trying to make. Lay it flat on the Channel top with the tails towards you. You are making pins to fit these sockets. Note that the first pin is only cut on the right-hand side of it, and you will be cutting away the wood and leaving a dovetail pin where the space is... So, starting on the left of the board: it’s a Right hand cut only, then Right – Left, Right – Left, and so on to the last pin and the last is only a Left.... ...unless of course you have a different layout with a tail in the end of the run instead of a pin. See asymmetric dovetails. There’s a knack to getting it perfect, but it won’t take long if you take it gently. This is not your hamfisted dovetail jig; it needs care and finesse! The Pin Plate is loosened and, the Pin moved up to touch the wedge. The other side is checked in the same way. The drop pin plate is tightened. This sets the position for making the dovetail. When cutting the pins try to put an even, gentle pressure on the Wedge with the Drop-Pin as you bring it forwards, and make sure that your plates and all sliding surfaces are polished and easy running. Try the fit. At the end of the run, lift the router and lift the DropPin. If the fit is right, you’re ready to go ahead. If not put it back and adjust the fit and trim it up. Finding the Pathway How you make the track through the work is up to you, but it’s worth precutting from the front edge, going clockwise in and out of the Wedges, down cutting or climb cutting, to cut the front edge. Then there’s no tearout when you come to work down the Wedges from the back. You do the majority of the cutting from the back so that the dust flies straight into your extraction system. You will find for yourself the best way of running around the pathways – working left to right or right to left. As with tenons, don’t rush it in the beginning... you want to make a good job of it first, and become fast and good later. You should find that the two pieces – pins and tails – fit hand in glove, breakout free and square. Asymmetry You could want an asymmetrical layout for making drawers with cocked beading, or because you just want it asymmetric, or because the size of the box is critical but does not fit with the pitch of the template. One end pin can be made larger. Alternatively the end tail can be made larger. Normal WoodRat dovetail techniques easily cope with asymmetry, but here we resort to a bit of cunning. If you have a bigger pin on one end than on the other, you will have to somersault the tail board so that the same edge is cut with the bigger pin. But as is always the case, the pin board must be Cart-wheeled, to keep its inner face against the machine face, otherwise you will get a zee/zed instead of a square box. Start by making pins on one pin board with its corresponding tail board. Make the opposite corner with the other pin board and its corresponding tail board. They will match up. But now when you cartwheel each pin board to make pins in the other end, you will need to move the template to get the pins in the right positions. The size of the bigger pin (the position of the cut) is got from marking out the big pin on the end of the pin piece as you would for hand cut dovetails, placing the tail board over the end of the pin board. Mark the end pin position with a marking knife. Place the marked up tail piece with its inner face against the machine face, and relocate the template so that the bit will cut down the line of that bigger pin. Re-lock the Template. Now you can run the line of pins for the two 21 remaining corners. Box with a Box Lid The usual method of cutting off the lid part of a box through a large pin is impractical with the Pathfinder. You can cut the wood first and make two boxes one for the box and the other for the lid, but you must be sure to make each part to the same overall dimensions. Alternatively, you could make the cut through one of the tails between the pins. A variation on this is to use the full MB3 MitreBox and Mitre the tails so that the lid and box can be fitted together by rebating/ rabetting the lid into the box. Grooves for Bottoms and Lids The RP3 router plate has the usual slot on the left-hand side so that it can act as a normal router plate when doing non-pathfinder work. So, when grooving for the box bottom and lid, simply place one of your Starknobs (from the WoodRat/LittleRat kit) in the M8 tapped hole in the HalfPlate and screw the plate down where you need it. Take out the Cheeks etc. Place the Brush, and feed each piece through by hand. Remember: feed on the up-cut if widening the groove. When feeding small pieces, you’ll need the blue block placed in the yellow dust chute to stop the workpiece pushing into the cutter gap. To make a stopped cut to avoid the groove showing on the outside off the joint, set the brush down a little from the bit (for protection), and carefully lift the workpiece up into the cutter at the beginning of the slot. Feed the workpiece along under the plate cutting the groove, and drop it when it reaches the end of the groove before it breaks through the joint. This takes a little practice, so try it on some scrap first. Thicknessing the Bottoms Having run the groove you can thickness the box bottom to fit the groove by resetting the bit and running the bottom past the cutter to rebate it, as for normal Woodrat practice. 22 Because the pitch is fixed by the Template, you will need to design the drawer heights to match the available socket positions on the template. If the pitch is unsuitable turn the template and try the pitch on the opposite set. The diagram at the end of this section will help with the design. The Drawer Side is mounted vertical, with its inner face against the machine. The Drawer Front is horizontal up under the HalfPlate and the Template with the inside face up, and the two are cut in one pass... first a series of forward cuts to make the sockets without tearout, then a pass, down cutting the tails, and then cutting the pin pockets between the pins of the Drawer Front. This is all done with the same dovetail bit. 23 The D A series of oak and sycamore drawers made with an early version of the Pathfinder Half-Blind Template. 24 Half-Blind or Lapped Dovetails Drop Pin Set up the MitreBox MB3 with both left Cheek screwed to the Fence and the Right one held with the Rod Clamp M6 Locking keys Drop-Pin Plate Dove- Half-blind Dovetail Template Locking Lever Rod Lock Bracket Lobed Washer Locking Keys Spreader Rod to be stored We have a third and very different Template for lapped dovetails, with a different approach to its joint. The two workpieces are mounted together in the MitreBox and the same dovetail bit cuts both of them in one run. It enables you to dovetail a reasonable sized drawer in under 5 minutes, because there is no need to chisel the back corners of the pin pocket as in normal WoodRat half-blind dovetails. It is very quick. The size of bit is given by the thickness of drawer front and is less critical than that for through dovetails, as the lap can vary. Having two differing pitches on the same Template allows a greater choice of dovetail layout, and each template is designed for a specific WoodRat dovetail bit. Although intended for drawers, the half-blind method also gives you full blind dovetails which you can make into secret dovetails by mitering them using the Mitrebox, and therefore you can make boxes with continuous perfect figured grain with no visible joints. 25 tail Bit to use You would expect to select the bit to match the thickness of The drawer Side is held vertical and the Front is horizontal. between the Cheeks of the MitreBox. The Template (shown faded) is held by the Bracket and goes with the wood. The Bit goes with the plate and the Pin directs the Bit around the back of the Side to form the Tails and then into the Front to make the pin pockets. It’s all done with the same Bit at the same depth. The spacer is not shown The Cam Lock holds the two Cheeks apart, but is able to squeeze together to lock the Front in place. The handle provides a quick release with a half the drawer front and to allow a nice balance between pin and drawer side when it shows as you open the drawer. But, each Half-Blind Template works with only one size of dovetail bit. Choose bit that corresponds with the Template. Interestingly one Template can give a range of results. One Bit, one template, but three very different results show that there’s lots of room for individuality. If you have a range of Templates choose the one that is intended for the bit you intend to use. Set-Up Add the second (right-hand) cheek for half-blind dovetails, as the drawing above. Place a drawer side vertically up under the plate and against the machine face. Cam it in, but not tightly. The Rod Clamp Set up the clamping system on the threaded rod as shown in the illustration. The Rod Clamp needs to hold the drawer front firmly, up under the HalfPlate, in a way that when you loosen the Hand Lever by half a turn you can slide out the Front piece and slide in 26 1. A rather heavy drawer front 2. A classic design solution 2. A thin drawer front and weak looking outer pins Park Position Place the tail vertical The Separating Stick spaces the Side and the Front a repeatable distance apart. The Front is pushed up against the plates above and against the stick. The Drop Pin is up and off to the right taking the Bit up to the Park Position Each HB Plate is made for a particular 1in7 dovetail bit and has a fixed pitch. But there are two different pitches on each plate which gives a wider choice of width to match the boards to. The half-plate and router plate are not shown. the next without snagging, and tighten it so that it does not move under pressure from the cutting action, which will be pushing into the end-gain. So loosen all the inner nuts and washers, and with the hand lever with the lever towards you, tighten the Big Lobed Washer so that the Drawer Front – lifted up close under the plates – is firmly held. Loosen the Hand Lever and slide out the Front. Slide it back again and tighten, and make sure that the work piece is firm and will not be dislodged when attacked by the bit. Rubber washer Sandwich Tighten the back nut on the Lobed Washer Nut. Then the pair of nuts (nut and lock nut) on the rubber washer sandwich, squashing it so that when you push the lever away, the rubber washers push on the Cheek, releasing the Drawer Front and giving room for the next one to be slid into place. You’ll need to push upward on the Drawer Front to make good contact with the HalfPlate, which will ensure that the Front dovetails have the same depth of cut as the Side, which is slid up vertically under the Half-plate. When all is running nicely we find that it’s best to put the Drawer Front in first - horizontal, then the Side - vertical, pushing it up under the Plate and Camming it in loosely. Then lift the Front and tighten the Hand Lever and then retighten the CamLock on the Side. Making Classic Drawers The Pathfinder allows you to make drawers with all the characteristics of a classic, craftsman’s piece – fine dovetails, thin drawer sides, sliding drawer bottom, etc., but in a fraction of the time. 1. Preparation of work-pieces The better you prepare your work, making the ends of the Side and Front square and true, and the inner surfaces flat as can be, the better will be the joint. All the three boards 27 of the drawer (two sides and one front) need to be as far as possible the same width. The drawer Back should be made at the same time to the same thickness and cut down only after it is jointed. The Drop-pin is placed in the router plate and anchored with the Locking Screws. Loosen the plate to change the position of the Pin, forward and back, relative to the Bit. There are three pairs of holes for the M6 Locking Keys. The Drop-Pin runs around the tail islands and then the pin pocket recesses in the Template in the same pass as the Bit is cutting the drawer sides, and then the pin pockets, all at the same depth. This makes it a simple operation, once it is set up. You may need to design the drawers to accommodate the template to some extent, but each template has two different pitches, for the same dovetail size, so it should not be hard to find a pitch that’s very close to the height of drawer front you need. The full-size diagram of the possible dovetail runs at the end of this section should help with the layout. 2. Getting to work Unless you are doing asymmetrical work like for cock beaded drawers you can ensure that you make a perfectly symmetrical arrangement. Take the centre of the board, and match it with either the centre of the run, or exactly between two pins. Use the Template and put it the right way round to give you pitch A or the larger B as right for your design. Place a piece for tails (a Side) with the inner face against the face of the WoodRat and the corresponding Drawer Front horizontal, up under the plates, with the inner face facing up. The CNC-cut, Half-Blind Template allied to exactly machined dovetail bits gives a close fit of pin to tail, that is when the depth of the bit is just less than the full depth by 0.5mm or less. Adjusting the depth gives just enough leeway in the fit, provided that you use a WoodRat 1in7 dovetail bit. The template gives exact alignment of pins to sockets, so that the boards marry up exactly. This only leaves the depth of the Side, after it has been cut with tails, to the depth of the pin pocket. And this needs careful setting, so that there is a minimum of final cleaning up. The Half-blind Layout Mark the centre line of your board and note whether the pins will be odd or even in number, and camlock the board in vertically with the inner face against the machine face. Fit the Template with its two Locking keys in ready, and slide it into the Bracket. Don’t tighten yet. Track the board to line up its centre line mark with the Bit (with its blades north/south). Then slide the Template to line it up under the Drop-Pin, aligning the Template with either the corresponding alley (odd number of sockets), or the middle of the Island (even number). Tighten the Template Locking keys. Track west and east to check that the two ends of the run look right, with the Bit covering the two ends equally at both edges of the Drawer Side. A. Even number of sockets: Bit lined up on the centre line of the board, and the Template moved to position the Pin to the middle of the island. The Layout Take extra/spare pieces of Side and Front. Place them in the Pathfinder. A B Place the Side vertical, with its inner face against the machine face. Place the Front (inside up), up under the Half-plate. Hold it there with the RodLock. Follow this: making sure you can see the bit clearly. 1. Unlock the router, zero the Bit onto the end of the Drawer Side and depth the router to the depth of the bit using the scale on your router, and not to the depth of the wood as with through dovetails. Set it to the blade length of the Bit, and then unscrew the depthing foot a couple of half turns. The depthing is now a little less than the blade length. For example depth the 12-6 bit to 12mm and give it a couple of downward turns. 28 B. Odd number of sockets: Bit lined up on the centre line of the board, and the Template moved to position the Pin between the islands WR-8-7-20-10 The cutter is at the line on the top of the drawer side. The Drop pin is placed in the Template at the front edge of the socket island. The drawer front up under the template, held by the Rod Lock The drawer side is held by the Cheeks and the CamLock Fig 27.1 27.2/3. Track the Board away left, and Plunge the router fully. Move the router (Pin up) to line up the flat of the Bit square against the board end. The drawing shows the position of the Bit when plunged, where the cut at the neck just leaves the full thickness of the board on its end. 2. Bring the Bit forward – the blade depth/length divided by 7 (slope number of Bits). Put the Pin to the back of the Island and lock down. 1. Drawer Side is used to mark the thickness of the Drawer Front on the inside face, with knife or sharp pencil. T L T Use another piece to measure out the thickness of the Drawer Side board onto the inside (upside) face of the Drawer Front, and draw a line against the board with a sharp knife or pencil (fig 28.1). 2. Lift the Bit. Track the wood under it and drop the bit onto the end of it. Bring the Drop pin to the north face of the island for the tails as shown, and lock the Drop-Pin plate to the RouterPlate. When you later drop the Bit again on the left of the workpiece, it will cut along the back of the islands making the tails, which will be the full thickness of the drawer side at their widest, at the top of the board. L/7 4. Lift the Pin, and bring it to the back of one of the Pin Pockets. This brings the router Bit forward to the back of the pocket cutting position on top of the drawer front but first... note that when the Bit is dropped to depth, the neck will just graze the top back edge of the Side board. Which is the same distance T that the pencil mark is into the drawer Front. Fig 27.2 5. Push the Drawer Front forward so that the point of the bit (aligned north/south) lines up with the line on the drawer Side. Tighten the RodLock handle. This puts the back of the pocket under the bit at its position to cut the back of the pocket. Now tighten the CamLock. Plan view of the Bit against the end of the Drawer Side End view of the Bit against the end of the Drawer Side 6. Making the Spacer Stick This is the best time to make a spacer stick to act as a spacer between the Side and End. It sits on the two MB3 Cheeks in front of the drawer side, and needs be thin enough to lie beneath the sockets as they are being cut yet catch the bottom edge of the Drawer Front to act as a Stop. Accurately made, the Stick should now slot in between the Side and the Front. It should be about 8mm thick, longer than the width of the boards and exactly the width of the space between the Side and Front. 7. Release the Drawer Front again and push it forwards firmly against the Stick and up under the Half-plate, so that it holds the Side in place, making sure all is firm. The Spacer now makes a repeatable distance between Side and End. 29 The cutter is already depthed so drop the bit, and you’re ready to go. 1. The bit lines up against the edge of the board, and t 2. the work and template are moved so that the Pin can line up against the island t 3. the Pin is placed against the north face of the island t The Drop-Pin is brought forward to the back of the Pin Pocket. Bringing the Bit with it. t t 5 The Drawer Front is pushed forward so that the mark lines up with the front blade of the Bit 6 The Separating stick is made to fit between the Side andn the End to make a repeatable distance between them. 30 1. Bit cuts sockets from the front. Pin goes across the front of the Islands and up into each alley. 4. The Bit now comes forward, and runs down the left of the first pin and back out. 2. Bit trims the edge and then cuts along the back, downcutting the inner face of the Side. 5. It then goes right, down-cutting the face to the right, then in again and cleans the back of the pocket Cutting the Tails The correct direction of the cut is a matter of opinion (which means that no-one has worked out the best way yet). This is one way: Start by going from the Park position (Bit down) at top right with the Pin up. Cut a trim cut for the right-hand end socket, then drop the Pin again. 1. Go up into each socket position to eliminate breakout from the front. 2. Then work back, first giving a trim cut to the first socket away towards the back (remember that you always try to run clockwise to down/climb cut your work). Then skim, clockwise, right, across the back of the board. 3. and then, up-cutting again, trim each tail carefully with its rounded corners, back to the left hand end again and into the space between sockets and pins. The Pin Pockets 4. Now travel down into the left hand edge of the first, lefthand pocket, into the end grain. 3. Then carefully back forming the rounded corners and connecting with pre-cut sockets 6. Then on to pocket #2, running down the right side of the prong, and off right again, and so on... 5. Then go back out and right, across the open side of the pocket (down cutting, to avoid breakout), then down the right hand edge of the pocket, and again left, across the back of the pocket, then back out, clearing any waste, and on to the next pocket... 6. Go down the left hand edge of the next pin, out across the open part of the pocket and down the right hand edge, across the back of the pocket, and on to the next pin pocket. and so on to the finish. There are other ways, but we stress again that it is best to cut carefully first and fast later. Remember that the neck of a dovetail bit has very little cutting edge and simply cannot go fast: specially into end-grain. The Fit Now try the fit. It should be pretty accurate. You get the exact fit of pin to socket by raising (loosening the fit) a fraction, or lowering the Bit (tightening), and trying again. Use the fine adjustment on the depthing foot for this. Now look at the depth of the Side in the pin pocket. Chances are that the depthing will not be quite exact. Decide whether 29 the Side should be thicker (in other words the side lies too low in in the pocket, or too thick in the pocket and stands proud. Say it is too thick by 1mm: You could of course plane it off, but there’s a better way. When you make the next trial, put the whole set-up back together ready, with the stick in front of the drawer side, and the drawer front pushed in against it. Then loosen the Locking keys and pull the Drop-Pin Plate forward by half a millimeter measured against the scale on the RouterPlate. This will make the Side Tails one half mill thinner and the Pin pocket one half mill deeper with a net change of 1 mm. If the Side stands proud of the Front by 1mm, move the Pin Plate forward by 0.5mm to decrease the depth of the tail and at the same time increase the depth of the pocket Conversely, if the drawer side is too deeply set, the Drop Pin Plate needs to be reset away from you by half of the over-depthing, because, as the bit moves away from you, it makes the tail at the same time thicker, and the pocket shallower. So it is quite a subtle adjustment. When drawer side, stick and drawer front are cammed in place, the whole structure should be solid, square, and ready for work. Make sure that the drawer side lies flat against the machine face, and that the inside face of the front is flat up under the half-plate. Push upward with the fingers of the left hand before tightening the Camlock and the Hand Lever. Remember, the object is to track the minimum route, leaving nothing behind and causing no breakout. It is tempting to go fast, but we advise building up speed gradually, when you are sure of your method. The two pieces should come out from the cheeks and lock together exactly, ready for glue. Trouble shooting Mis-match of boards One crucial thing, especially with drawers, is the way the two pieces marry up. Planing them up to correct a mismatch tends to make the perfectly square drawer front into a parallelogram shape, which does not properly fit the drawer opening. This should not happen as you benefit from CNC cut Templates and they should be perfect, but they will not fit exactly if the boards are of different width. Slipping workpieces WoodRat do not sandpaper the faces; we leave this job to you. When applying sandpaper, use a synthetic rubber cement like Copydex or the US equivalent which is easy to remove and replace when needed. The Pathfinder is very much “work in progress”. These three Templates demonstrate what is possible. What we actually make as the next generation of Templates will depend on demand from you.... Let us know what you think. 32 1mm oversize Chart of Tails Layout for the 12-6 Bit 2A 12-6 at 24 2B 12-6 at 26 This is a full sized drawing of the half-blind template 2 and the resulting drawer layout. The blue lines represent the layout for when the pitch is 24mm -2A and the red lines show the different layouts for the 26mm pitch.- 2B. You can make some drawers with layout A and some with B as it suits the plan. Start measuring from the bottom line. layout for a cock-beaded drawer using the 24mm pitch HB Template. 33 Using the MitreBox The full MitreBox will allow you to cut accurate 45° angles across the ends of the four pieces of a box, as well as hold work at any required angle. WR-8-7-20-10 Mark out the work with a sharp pencil or knife. Arrange the Box with the two Cheeks held apart with the Rod Clamp and the Spreader Rod so that the workpiece can slide between them. Use a 45° set square to check the angle, and then tighten the CamClamp to hold the work square and firm. Like this, a variety of mitred joints can be cut, but for Secret Dovetails we need to mitre the Set up the MB3 as for Half- Blind dovetails. You will need a 45° bevel or, better, a 45° triangle set square. Place the work inside up, with the 45° set to make the angle between workpiece and the underside of the plates. The 45° line determines the depth of the Bit for cutting tail sockets. Cut away the top of the board. Make the gauging piece to be the thickness of this cut away part. The HB Template you use will determine the bit needed, as each Half-blind Template is designed to work with its own WoodRat bit. Using that dovetail bit, cut the mitres at each edge, and along the back edge. Repeat for each of the other seven board ends. Next put each Side piece in vertically and reduce the board end as shown (fig 32.2). Measure the dovetail bit’s blade length (less a 0.5mm) up from the 45° line. Cutting away this part will allow the Bit to cut to full depth down to the 45° line when making tail sockets. The Gauging Piece See from figure 33 that the Side and End will be cut with the same cutter but at two different set depths: the Side with the bit depthed to the full board thickness, but for the Ends the Bit is depthed to the bit blade depth (less a fraction). It’s worth making a gauging piece that is the difference between the board width and the cutter blade length. It will give you the exact gauge between cutting the tails (without the 34 gauging piece The 45° line projected from the corner and taken across the face of the board (fig. 32.2) 2. The neck of the bit is aligned with the corner of the joint, and the Pin is dropped on the north face of an island. aa 4. The Bit is dropped to depth (the length of the blade). The gap between the boards needs a separating stick. T 1. The Bit is depthed to the thickness of the workpiece 5. The thickness of the gauging piece is as between the bit and the underside of the work It gauges the raising of the Router between making the Tails and making the Pin pockets. 3. The Pin is brought forward to the back of the pocket, and the Bit dropped gently onto the workpiece. The work is slid under the Bit, aligning the point of the blade with the line at 45° 6.Depth the Bit to the full thickness of the workpiece. Cut the tail sockets, and round the corners, Cut from behind,, and stop the cut 35 gauge) and the pin pockets (with the gauge) later. The same rule applies for secret dovetails as for through dovetails: The Ends (the shorter boards) take the pins or in this case the pin pockets, and the Sides take the tail sockets. Note that the fit of the tail to pin will be determined by the accuracy of this gauge because it determines the depth of the pin pocket. The thinner the gauge, the deeper the pins, and the tighter will be the fit. And vice versa. Placing the tail sockets and pins The set-up for cutting mitred dovetails is basically the same as for half-blind dovetails, but there are differences: Find the two pieces that make a corner from the arrow marks in the usual way. Place the Tail Piece vertical, with its inside face against the machine face, and the End with its inside face, facing up, under the plates, and with a gap between the vertical and the horizontal boards. Find the centre line of the work-piece board. Align that centre with the Template so that at least two pockets lie comfortably within the width of the work-piece, and there is enough mitred edge for whatever purpose (rebating and/or moulding) as the design needs. Zero the bit carefully onto the top surface of the End, and depth the router to the boards’ thickness (all the boards should have the same thickness). Track the work away from the Bit to the left. Turn the blades north/south, and pull the router gently forward and track the wood back right so that the wood just touches the face of the bit blade. Now position the blade so that its edge just intersects the top inner face of the socket block. This is shown in the diagram figure 33 Step 2. Loosen the Drop Pin plate, drop the pin and bring it against the north face of one of the islands, (track the wood and template to the left if necessary to do so) and tighten the Locking Keys. Raise the Bit. Raise the Drop Pin, and bring the router forward, drop the Pin into the pin pocket, and register it at the back of the pin pocket. Slide the box End forward under the blade of the bit so that the line drawn when you marked out the 45° on the boards lies at the tip of the bit. Push the End up firmly dunder the plates and lock the boards in place. Everything is now ready to run, but take the measurement between the two boards for the spacer stick before you disturb the set up. Cutting the Tail Sockets Run the Tails sockets with the Bit depthed without the gauging block, but depthed using the work-piece. Run the row of tails as you would do the H-B’s but contained within the mitred edges, and without cutting the front of the board of course. Stop the cut as you pull forward from the back face until the Bit hits the rising plane of the mitre. It will not be able to cut through to the front face in any case. Cut along the back edge to undercut Cutting the Pin Pockets For the Pins, raise the router (don’t alter the depthing foot) and drop it again gently onto the gauging piece. Run around the pins and cut out the pockets. The Drop-pin will run along the tines of the template pockets. This might mean that the pins themselves could be a little too long. It is possible to customise the length of the tines, but this might not be good for half-blind dovetails done later with the same template. If the mitered surfaces don’t come together it could be that the pins are too long. A simple solution is to raise the Pin and cut across the front end of the pins to shorten them. The two boards should fit together nicely. If it’s a loose fit as you put them together, you can drop the bit a small amount 36 to tighten the fit for the next corner. Do this by removing a small amount from the gauging piece to deepen the cut. Do not alter the depthing foot. This is still set to the thickness of the boards. Do not forget to use the gauging piece for the Pin Pockets and to remove it for the Tail Sockets in each of the four corners, and be careful to use your arrow marks to get the right pieces to the right corners. As you put the boards together you will see that the pattern of grain will run continuously around the ring. 37 Published in England by WoodRat Publications Printed by Paper Tiger Press ©˙Martin Godfrey January 2010 Godney BA5 1RY UK 38 39