DVD 64 minutes
ISBN 978-1-56158-703-2 Product #061011
Mark Duginske offers a master's insights into machine woodworking and some honest shortcuts that will help you in your own journey toward woodworking precision. You'll see how to do fast, elegant joinery with basic power tools (with no need for expensive gadgets) and how to achieve zero-frustration, complete-control woodworking with machines.
You will learn about:
- "reading" lumber to avoid stock-preparation problems
- fine-tuning the table saw, bandsaw, drill press and radial-arm saw
- sawing beautifully fitting dovetails on the table saw
- making mortise-and-tenon joints on the drill press
- bandsawing bookmatched panels
- making an ingenious 50-cent device that ensures accuracy to within 0.002 in.
The companion book to this video is
Mastering Woodworking Machines.
Customer Reviews from Amazon
Average Customer Review:
How to choose, set up and tune your machines for safety...., January 1, 2002
,precision and efficiency. If you have invested in woodworking machines, you want and need to get the most out of them. In Mastering Woodworking Machines, Mark Duginske shows you how to choose, set up, and tune your machine for safety, precision, and efficiency. His common-sense techniques will help you avoid frustrating mistakes and put you in complete control of your woodworking projects.
Duginske's systematic approach picks up where owner's manuals leave off, and it applies to all brands and makes of machinery. You'll also learn how to prepare stock effectively and how to produce the joints and cabinet parts you need without any expensive add-on jigs. Whatever you want to make in your shop, you'll work more efficiently with Duginske at your elbow. (As quoted form the FWW site).
gain the confidence to master your woodworking machines, February 27, 2001
This is a great book, that will help you learn how to tune up your woodworking machines. It is written with wit and some very dry (Wisconsin) humor. The entire book is very readable and informative on woodworking in general, and on tuning woodworking machines in particular.
I read the whole book, and used the information on tuning the table saw in great depth. I was able to take an old Taiwanese table saw that had serviceable tolerances, and tune it to maximum performance. Initially, I concentrated on measuring the run-out of the arbor to decide whether the machine was worth keeping at all. It was. A year later, after moving, I went back to this reference and found a problem with the trunion alignment. In so doing, I also found and fixed a potentially dangerous problem with the blade raising mechanism. Once identified, it was easily fixed, but I wouldn't have had the courage to look without the confidence inspired by the author's careful treatment. He made the process seem simple, and encouraged patience and perseverance in approaching the tune-up task.
All of this was very necessary in the case of my old saw.
The best sections, in my opinion, are the table saw and band saw, but he covers a number of machines, including the router, shaper, and jointer.
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