View Full Version : Wood jointer
Classic88
30th November 2017, 06:50 PM
Does anyone near Sydney have a large wood jointer they could run a couple of timber slabs through for me to get the warp out of them please?
BMKal
1st December 2017, 11:31 AM
Does anyone near Sydney have a large wood jointer they could run a couple of timber slabs through for me to get the warp out of them please?
If you can't find one on here, try your local "Mens Shed". I do a bit of woodworking in Kalgoorlie, and any tools / machines I don't have, I can always find at the local Shed. [wink11]
Piddler
2nd December 2017, 08:33 AM
You need a Buzzer and Thicknesser.
Try a local joiner?
A Joiner is usually something to join the boards like a Biscuit Joiner or Festool Domino Joiner (They are awesome we have one).
BMKal
2nd December 2017, 10:26 AM
You need a Buzzer and Thicknesser.
Try a local joiner?
A Joiner is usually something to join the boards like a Biscuit Joiner or Festool Domino Joiner (They are awesome we have one).
No - a "jointer" is a very specific woodworking tool, which flattens a face or straightens and squares an edge of a piece of timber, where a thicknesser planes a piece of timber to thickness.
p38arover
2nd December 2017, 10:28 AM
Sorry, I gave my jointer to a local Men's Shed as it made too much mess for home use.
Bigbjorn
2nd December 2017, 11:05 AM
Sorry, I gave my jointer to a local Men's Shed as it made too much mess for home use.
Mess! Tell me about it. SWMBO bought a very nice gate leg table at a deceased estate auction. One leg was missing. Quote for one from a local cabinet maker/wood turner sent her to the wine cask. "Can you make one on your lathe?" I sent her off to buy the appropriate piece of timber, cut out a profile from traffic sign aluminium (Shh) and made a spring loaded jig so the toolpost would follow the profile. Quite successful. Then came clean up time. Bloody wood shavings and dust everywhere and I mean everywhere. I was still finding pockets of it years later. Told her no more wood work ever. Next time she will get a nice steel or aluminium leg.
ramblingboy42
4th December 2017, 01:27 PM
No - a "jointer" is a very specific woodworking tool, which flattens a face or straightens and squares an edge of a piece of timber, where a thicknesser planes a piece of timber to thickness.
Thank you, I just learned something.....now , how did it get the name?
Milton477
4th December 2017, 04:22 PM
Sometimes also called a surfacer.
One would face & edge a board on the jointer/surfacer before thicknessing to hopefully have something that is dead straight & not twisted.
p38arover
4th December 2017, 04:29 PM
Thank you, I just learned something.....now , how did it get the name?
What Does a Jointer Do? - Ask Matt #13 - YouTube (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3bbHwoi4kz8)
BMKal
11th December 2017, 12:32 PM
Thank you, I just learned something.....now , how did it get the name?
Not 100% sure, but I would think that it is because one of the most common uses for a jointer is to get the edges of boards perfectly straight so that they can be glued and butted together (or jointed) to form a large slab of timber to make things such as table tops. Not something I've ever done - I'm too busy playing with my lathe at the moment.
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