glenn bradley
Member
- Messages
- 11,516
- Location
- SoCal
I have often been sorry I sent my vertical belt sander down the road (there's only so much room in my shop). I really miss it for things like the edges of end-grain cutting boards as sanding the vertical grain horizontally or circularly just leaves more work later. There is a cast "fence" that came with my Jet edge sander that has never been much use. although I can't get the belt path to be vertical, I can orient myself to get the same function. I just needed a more substantial fence. I laminated a couple pieces of scrap 3/4" ply together and milled out the areas that required clearance:
I attach the ply to the cast fence, set the sander to this position and add the fence via the supplied knob:
.
Now I have something like this:
This piece of cherry is just for example and the grain is not running in the direction I would use this attachment for:
Imagine an end grain cutting board with a curved outer edge with the grain running vertically:
This will allow me to rough sand those surfaces without leaving a bunch of sanding marks that take an extra effort to remove later. It will have to do since I can't shoe-horn one of these in the shop:
In my dream shop all of my sanding stations are along one wall ;-)
I attach the ply to the cast fence, set the sander to this position and add the fence via the supplied knob:
.
Now I have something like this:
This piece of cherry is just for example and the grain is not running in the direction I would use this attachment for:
Imagine an end grain cutting board with a curved outer edge with the grain running vertically:
This will allow me to rough sand those surfaces without leaving a bunch of sanding marks that take an extra effort to remove later. It will have to do since I can't shoe-horn one of these in the shop:
In my dream shop all of my sanding stations are along one wall ;-)
Last edited: