Steve Maskery
Old Oak
I'm making some kitchen cabinets. MFC for the base material, but I will see it only on the inside. All outside surfaces will be painted wood.
I'm quite well set up for cutting sheet materials, but usually I am cutting MRMDF or occasionally plywood. Not often MFC.
My technique for cutting is to set the depth to 6mm (i.e. 4mm for the track and then 2mm into the board) and make the cut backwards. That way the surface is cut with the blade passing down into the melamine layer, rather than trying to lift it off. Then the through cut is made conventionally.
The result is a perfect cut with zero chipping, better than the factory edge.
Perfect, that is, to start with.
I've made 3 cuts on 4 boards, each 600mm and I'm starting to get chipping. Same board material, same blade, same technique. 12 cuts.
The blade needs sharpening. Fortunately I have spare blades and perfectly satisfactory sharpening jig.
None of the edges I have cut today will ever be seen in the finished array of cabinets, but the in-between panels, the tops, bottoms and shelves, need to be perfect, because they will be seen when the cabinets are open.
What is is about MFC that can kill a decent blade so quickly?
I'm quite well set up for cutting sheet materials, but usually I am cutting MRMDF or occasionally plywood. Not often MFC.
My technique for cutting is to set the depth to 6mm (i.e. 4mm for the track and then 2mm into the board) and make the cut backwards. That way the surface is cut with the blade passing down into the melamine layer, rather than trying to lift it off. Then the through cut is made conventionally.
The result is a perfect cut with zero chipping, better than the factory edge.
Perfect, that is, to start with.
I've made 3 cuts on 4 boards, each 600mm and I'm starting to get chipping. Same board material, same blade, same technique. 12 cuts.
The blade needs sharpening. Fortunately I have spare blades and perfectly satisfactory sharpening jig.
None of the edges I have cut today will ever be seen in the finished array of cabinets, but the in-between panels, the tops, bottoms and shelves, need to be perfect, because they will be seen when the cabinets are open.
What is is about MFC that can kill a decent blade so quickly?
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