Thursday, July 8, 2010

Surfacing End-grain Cutting Broards on a Router Table




Surfacing a end-grain cutting board on a router table, or with a router is fairly easy and quick. Using a hand held router is the same as surfacing any other board so I won't go into that, there is plenty of good information on that technique all ready. One note if you have a small router table you may need to clamp some boards to your table for the rails to ride on.

As you can see in the first picture the surface is pretty uneven.



First you will need two rails to attach to the sides of the cutting board. I used 1x4s little longer than the cutting board, and a couple of gage blocks normally I use 1/4 or 1/2 inch just nothing to thick unless you have a tall bit.


I set the cutting board on the gage blocks and place the rail along the sides on their ends, then I pin nail them to the board, and then I like to put a couple of #6 screws in the center of each rails to be sure they don't move. it is important that the rails don't rock. because they are your referenced surface.







I use a 3/4 Straight bit, but a 1/2" mortise bit gives a better finish or one of them flat bottom pattern bit that are designed for routing bowls would do a great job I am betting. 


Then all you do is set the bit a little higher that the gage block you used to set your rails, I started about 1/32nd and then slowly, with your hands on the top part of the rails, slide the cutting board back and forth across your table letting the bit do the work. 

Don't try to remove to much at one time because the bit can grab and the board can get away from you, it is better to take light cut and be safe. Stop and check your progress, you will more than like miss some sections just keep going over it. Just a note the first few times you get in to the rail it will make a lot of noise and grab the piece to be mindful of that, and it is a good idea to mark on your table a line where your cutter is you that way you will know where you are cutting.

The end product is fairly smooth and flat, but it still needs a little attention if you missed any little spots they come off quickly with a sharp chisel and then you can clean up the lines with a sander or a card scraper to get it smooth
make sure you tighten your router wing nut down tight or the bit can change hight like it need on me... duh



This bring to another point I used my small router table that I keep set up with a 1/4 round over bit. I did this to show that even with a small table you can still use this technique I know a lot of woodworkers own these type of router table and I didn't want them to think they needed a big fancy table to do it. all I did was clamp a couple of straight boards to the front and back and I used a spring clamps to hold them while I lined them up with my table then clamped them down with a couple of bar clamps. This gave the rails something to ride on while the bit surfaced the board.

Joey







10 comments:

Anonymous said...

I'm kind of wondering why you would go to such lengths for something designed to be whacked with a cleaver?

If it's to be a cutting board, I'd oil it, let it dry, sand it, wash it and put it in to service.

Michael

Troy Bouffard said...

Amazing, never seem to see the end of innovative methods to accomplish the task. Good job.

Unknown said...

Hi Micheal
The reason I don't just sand it, is that after the glue up I have some end up with some of the piece sticking up as much as an 1/16 to an 1/8 of an inch and if you have ever tried to sand that much off an end grain, well; its a lot of work, and uses up a lot time, and belt, where this took me about ten minutes to do. and then I sand, and oil my board, and its all ready for chopping, It really does make the whole think faster, and is a lot less work. Thanks for your comment stop by any time.

Tony, Thanks for the kind words.

Joey

Anonymous said...

I wonder what a recipient of an un-surfaced cutting board would think...I know that my wife wouldn't like it. Anyway, I was looking for a means of using a router table to do exactly what you showed, so thank you very much for posting your pics and description. I was all set to design a multi-part jig. You showed a simple, yet elegant solution for the task at hand. (do you recall where you first saw this method?)

SawTooth1953 aka Spence
Skokie, IL

Unknown said...

I just kind came up with it out of need and laziness, and the way you surface boards with a router as inspiration.
Joey

Anonymous said...

How thick were the blocks? I was thinking about 3 inches. I am doing a whole 4X6' dinner table.

Unknown said...

The blocks were 1 5/8 when I glued them up. They were just the off fall from a wall I was building and I thought man I think they would make a neat cutting board so I safe them. I set them in the shop for a while and let them dry some. after every thing was said and done my cutting board finished out at 1 3/8 , but I plan doing a baking board that I want to make thicker I think I am going for 2" I guess I could do a boarder than is 2" and leave the interior thinner.
Joey

Anonymous said...

I surely hope that isn't softwood you used

Unknown said...

Yes, yellow pine is consider a soft wood, but on the hardness scale it isn't that soft and has made a great cutting board which I have use every day now for about four years. Why did you have other concerns against using softwoods for something like this?

Anonymous said...

I just use my thickness planer. If you glue sacrificial boards on the ends you will get no chip out. Just cut them off after. Hope this helps somebody!