After several rounds of trial and [STRIKE]error[/STRIKE] learning, I'm starting to have some success resawing on my bandsaw. It certainly seems like setup is everything. I took advantage of the Hartville Tool sale and scored a Kreg Bandsaw Fence. It was not pre-drilled for my 16" Jet, but adding one slot took care of it. In hindsight, buying a good fence (instead of building my own or using clamped-on boards) is the first thing I should have done after buying the saw. Why do bandsaws come without fences? Anyway, after getting the drift adjustment dialed in, blade perpendicular to the table and the fence perpendicular to the blade, I am now getting pretty decent results. The drift adjustment mechanism on the Kreg is not as elegant as I would like, but after a few tries, I've got it dialed in much better than I ever had before. I think that on my last attempt, the resawn boards were the same thickness on ALL FOUR corners!!!
:banana:
I still have one issue, which may not be related to setup or technique. Every one of my resawing attempts has resulted in boards that cupped significantly (1/8" over 6" board width). The cupping is in both directions (with and against grain). In each case the boards cupped facing inwards - by which I mean that if I put the board back together, only the corners touch. The boards in question are white oak, kiln-dried, which have been acclimating in my dehumidified shop for 2-6 months (depending on which lot the board came from). Based on the movement, it appears the boards have higher moisture content on the outside than the inside. Or could this me something else? Case-hardening? Any guesses?
TIA!
Chris
:banana:
I still have one issue, which may not be related to setup or technique. Every one of my resawing attempts has resulted in boards that cupped significantly (1/8" over 6" board width). The cupping is in both directions (with and against grain). In each case the boards cupped facing inwards - by which I mean that if I put the board back together, only the corners touch. The boards in question are white oak, kiln-dried, which have been acclimating in my dehumidified shop for 2-6 months (depending on which lot the board came from). Based on the movement, it appears the boards have higher moisture content on the outside than the inside. Or could this me something else? Case-hardening? Any guesses?
TIA!
Chris