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So, I pick up my daughter, who, by the way absolutely loves the ramp at Shawn's shop, and head out the door and back to the hood. I'VE GOT A NEW POWER TOOL and I'm excited to give it a go. We stop by school and pick up my 5 y/o son and his buddy, then head for home. Make some PB&J's for the boys, make sure they've got plenty to entertain themselves with (which they always do), put my daughter down for nap, then I've got 2 hours that I'm truly off. Yes, OFF. So I Break out one of the blanks I've got stored for this very day and set up the shaping stands in the back driveway. Plug in the planer and fire her up. It's pretty amazing how quiet a planer is when you turn it on, then how much noise it makes when you put it to foam. You see, I've never actually used a planer, the two boards up to now have pretty much been shaped all by hand. So my second lesson of the day, I learned how to rip and tear foam.
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Yea, I've heard others talking about foam tearing, but never quite understood it until I did it repeatedly myself. Another lesson, no matter how much noise that thing is making, and no matter how much your worried about it waking up your daughter from her nap, it's kinda important to go slow, or not too fast. My goal for the day was to skin both sides of a blank. Well, I think I did a pretty decent job. Sure I've got some pretty deep divots. They should sand out as I widdle the board down to my desired thickness.
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I'm just stoked that I finally used a planer and did a reasonable job. This without any true guidance or supervision. Who knows how this one will turn out. I still haven't even drawn out the outline, and I'm not sure which outline or type of board I'm going to shape. The neat thing is that it will be a true shape, using most of the important tools that have been improvised for shaping by the masters of the trade. No more skipping steps or tools cause I'm afraid.
Oh yea, as you can see from the pictures above, the last lesson is, planers make a big mess. Even the plants didn't feel left out on this one.
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6 comments:
Slow and steady wins the race, and Jim Phillip's DVD is worth every penny.
back that! get the "genius" dvd!!!
Slow ,steady, and also shallow cuts will get you there...i´m still learning to cut the blanks to thickness...but a planer is way more accurate than the surform...just cut it slow and shallow...the barrel i have on my clark foam planner really helps...
You're a lucky guy. I love the ritual but still don't have the yargies to shape myself a board! Nice fatherhood angle to the post too!
Amen about having 'off' take on a different meaning when you have kids. Two hours seems like a gift from the Gods...Nice outline on that board, too.
Nice shaping room.
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