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I see a wave in the cut. Was this cut made against the fence pushing into the bit? If so, I think they showed in the thread to set up a negative cut. The straight edge is moved away from the bit the distance needed. The cut is made opposite the fence/straight edge. I like to use the spiral upcut bit as well. It is a little smoother cut. When i get close to the final cut I only shave it and run it through a couple times to make sure all the panels are the same size.Edges prepped with my router. Do they look good enough?
I see a wave in the cut. Was this cut made against the fence pushing into the bit? If so, I think they showed in the thread to set up a negative cut. The straight edge is moved away from the bit the distance needed. The cut is made opposite the fence/straight edge. I like to use the spiral upcut bit as well. It is a little smoother cut. When i get close to the final cut I only shave it and run it through a couple times to make sure all the panels are the same size.
I recall being told to avoid spiral bits for edge prep. One reason is that they tend to pull the material into the bit, so it's a bit trickier to get a final finish without a bump/dip. They really should only be used for flush trimming or pattern cutting. Not to mention, that's a really $$ bit to use for edge prep, JMOI like to use the spiral upcut bit as well. It is a little smoother cut.
I can't say I've heard specifically of this term actually...but you describe it correctly, you are passing the material between the fence and router bitIf so, I think they showed in the thread to set up a negative cut.
Definitely do a negative cut. The specific advantage is related to perfect squaring and paralleling. When you do a negative cut, you know that the two opposite edges (fence and bit) are going to be parallel. so you only need to square up one corner, and then you can make the other 3 square by negative cuts.I did not think about doing a negative cut I should have would have made they setup much easier. What specific advantage does this provide to cut?
I would still give it a light scraping before trying to weld it.Edges prepped with my router. Do they look good enough?
I seem to recall that MEK is one of the things you can use to weld acrylic in a pinch, but I'd have to do some digging.
Are you saying that you can't get high-grade Methylene Chloride in Sweden? MC is used as an industrial solvent in many cleaning products, I think you would have a very difficult time banning that from being publicly available.
Maybe the Weld-on / Sci-Grip commercial products, those are even being targeted here as well, but MC I can get that from a chemical supply company any day. You want to get the highest purity you can, that might be your stumbling block. If you can also get a small amount of Glacial Acetic Acid (Glacial = pure) then that's all you really need (5% AA to 95% MC, good to go)
The problem I ran into with a straight edge bit was chip out. I didn’t seem to have any issues with the spiral bit when I used it.For CNC, yes. For hand passes on a router table, straight cutter.
The problem I ran into with a straight edge bit was chip out. I didn’t seem to have any issues with the spiral bit when I used it.
Can you explain? I've never really had an issue with chipping. The last few passes should be paper thinThe problem I ran into with a straight edge bit was chip out. I didn’t seem to have any issues with the spiral bit when I used it.
Still unnecessary for almost every aquarium, since you don't need to use 2-part when solvent will do up to 2" thick just fine, and when you're that big, you're not annealing usually because of the sheer size of the build (which would require one of those ovens like ATM uses)
My point is that for the average hobbyist or even the average to above average tank build, annealing is really not needed.
I'm not sure why 2-part is used so extensively in the EU or Far East, do they just not have access to Methylene Chloride?