Rockwell Jawhorse Foldable Plywood Jaw, Model# RK9206

 Rockwell Jawhorse Foldable Plywood Jaw, Model# RK9206

Rockwell Jawhorse Foldable Plywood Jaw, Model# RK9206






Click Here



Thursday, June 21, 2012

Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig

Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig


Improve your woodworking at home with two simple jigs. Two of the most common cuts are a straight cut and the circle cut. If you learn how to do these perfect every time your woodworking will improve dramatically. In this first article we will cover the circle jig.

Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig

Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig

Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig


Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig



Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig

The circle jig can be used on a router or a jigsaw. I will describe the first jig router and tell you about the differences on the jigsaw jig later. You start with a piece of 1/2 "plywood about 7" wide and 30 "inches long.

Step one: mark holes to be drilled for mounting the fixed base of your router, they need to be exact, the drill bit the same size as your screw, so the base doesn't shift and you can thread the screws up through the jig into the router base. You are mounting the router base on one end ofthe 7 "x 30" plywood. Drill the holes

Step two: after you have drilled the mounting holes for your base, then centered between those holes use a hole saw to cut a 1 1/2 "to 2" hole that your router bits will be positioned in the base and router are attached.

Step three: mount the base router and router to the jig with the straight bits you want to use with this jig. I used a 1/4 "straight bit for this.

Step four: take a square and run it along the edge of the plywood until it touches the router bit on the long side of the board, draw a line. This is the cutting edge of the bit and where you will measure along the board to get the different radii marked.

Step five: along the same axis as the bit, draw a line perpendicular to that, up the center of theboard. Measure from the bit's inside edge line, along the center of the board in one inch intervals, and mark those 1 inch intervals. Drill holes at the 1 "marks with a drill bit the same size as the nail or screw you want to use as your pivot for the jig. Mine go to 24 "inches so I can make a 48" circle with it.

To use, you simply find the center of your circle on your project, drill a small hole to accept your pivot and insert the nail or screw through the jig, at the radius mark you need, to make the proper size circle. Then continue into the center hole on your project with the pivot to cut your circle in quarter inch increMents so as to not over work your router motor.

Woodworking at Home Made Easy With a Circle Jig