• Hi all and welcome to TheWoodHaven2 brought into the 21st Century, kicking and screaming! We all have Alasdair to thank for the vast bulk of the heavy lifting to get us here, no more so than me because he's taken away a huge burden of responsibility from my shoulders and brought us to this new shiny home, with all your previous content (hopefully) still intact! Please peruse and feed back. There is still plenty to do, like changing the colour scheme, adding the banner graphic, tweaking the odd setting here and there so I have added a new thread in the 'Technical Issues, Bugs and Feature Requests' forum for you to add any issues you find, any missing settings or just anything you'd like to see added/removed from the feature set that Xenforo offers. We will get to everything over the coming weeks so please be patient, but add anything at all to the thread I mention above and we promise to get to them over the next few days/weeks/months. In the meantime, please enjoy!

Cleaning up lipping

Cabinetman":2h73s5m4 said:
Canter? is that for trimming edge banding?

Hello ian, it's a Lamello Cantex,

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7yjmLuXwnk

It's a machine for flushing-off bigger lippings in a single pass. For smaller lippings (or especially with laminates) you can get similar one-pass results with a router. Up to a few years ago I'd do everything with a bench plane and a card scraper...if you're prepared to take a little bit more time then they work pretty well too!
 
:lol: You don't know me very well, Alasdair......:)
 
Mike G":ewdm9qua said:
:lol: You don't know me very well, Alasdair......:)

There was definitely a tongue firmly in my cheek there Mike, the lipping planes are high cost single function machines (around £700) designed more for volume production. I've only ever seen one online. I would however agree with the posts advocating block plane and scraper I never liked cleaning lipping with a router it is one slip or a bearing sticking and piece is ruined.
 
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