Thanks for your dip**** comment.
Let me enlighten you.
If you're using a biscuit joiner that's out of parallel by .010" in one
slot, you are automatically out .020" when you join it to another board.
Add to this whatever the actual biscuit is out...if it's out the opposite
way, you're gold. If it's out the other way, you're even more hosed. Of
course, there's no way to measure anyway, so you control what you can and
don't worry about what you can't.
And all this may be fine when you're gluing up a top and using multiples.
When you're using a single FF biscuit to glue-up one corner of a picture
frame, you now have a twisted joint.
Any of this make sense to you, ****stick?
"Swingman" wrote in message
...
"Mark Cooper" wrote in message
I bought a PC, it was out .010."
Took it to the PC repair facility, they said that it cannot be
fixed...there
is no adjustment for out-of-parallel in that plane.
They pulled a new one off the shelf, tested it. It was out "only" .005."
Walked out with that one.
Damn, I'm impressed ... must really slow you down, mic'ing all those
biscuits to those tolerances too, eh?
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Last update: 5/06/05