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View Full Version : Searching for Cutting Methods for 1/8" & 1/16" aircraft Plywood



braywood
02-14-2012, 08:10 AM
Hello All - with all that experience out there, I need your help/ideas for safe, efficient and hopefully quicker ways to cut thinner plywoods. A box or carpet knife will cut through 1/16" ply fairly well, but I'd like a better method. I'd use my bandsaw for the 1/8" stuff - but I don't have one (yet!). I have over 900 small 1/8" (3mm) ply gussets to cut out for ribs of my Pietenpol. One at a time is kinda slow!!

If you know of any tricks or methods you have found work well - please share!!

Thanks in advance

Mark in Northern Ireland

CraigCantwell
02-14-2012, 12:26 PM
If your cuts are short enough, might be possible using a powered mitrebox saw with a veneer type blade. With good layout planning, you might be able to get a lot done in a short time.

nrpetersen
02-14-2012, 01:19 PM
When you do get a bandsaw, use a blade with more than 1 tooth per wood thickness to minimize back side split out. Also, cut a supporting piece of scrap metal & feed it thru the blade so that the blade kerf is equal to the support kerf - and not the stock gap that came with the bandsaw. Again this minimizes breakout on the back side.

Chad Jensen
02-14-2012, 02:34 PM
This would still be a one-at-a-time method, but tin snips work great (and quick) for cutting thin ply. I did use a bandsaw for my Tailwind rib gussets, cutting ten sheets at a time.

Tom Downey
02-14-2012, 02:39 PM
I have over 900 small 1/8" (3mm) ply gussets to cut out for ribs of my Pietenpol. One at a time is kinda slow!!

If you know of any tricks or methods you have found work well - please share!!

Thanks in advance

Mark in Northern Ireland
I've found that you simply glue a over sized piece of ply on the joint allow to harden and run a dremel tool driven laminate trimmer around all sides and get a perfect fit every time.

Tom Downey
02-14-2012, 02:44 PM
Hello All - with all that experience out there, I need your help/ideas for safe, efficient and hopefully quicker ways to cut thinner plywoods.
If you know of any tricks or methods you have found work well - please share!!
Thanks in advance
Mark in Northern Ireland
one of these on a mini mandrel

http://www.ebay.com/itm/Solid-Carbide-Slotting-Slitting-Jeweler-Blade-Saw-2-OD-010-Thickness-Metal-New-/370573230432?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item5647e2c160#ht_764wt_983

Dana
02-14-2012, 04:38 PM
I don't know if it's still made, but I always used (and still do use) a Dremel Moto-Shop saw to cut plywood and hardwood for R/C models. You can still find them cheap on ebay or flea markets.

braywood
02-14-2012, 05:15 PM
Thanks guys! Just what I was looking for.....I did say 1/8" in the first post, but the rib gussets are actually 1/16"!! All 900+ of them...

The dremel saw blade jewller blade idea sounds the best to me - I have tried the snips method and found it crushed and split too much - maybe not the right snips.....and I am cutting sheets that are 1.2m square (about 47 inches square) to start, so the mitre box won't work, I don't think.

I will look for a bandsaw - the blade will need 32 teeth per inch for 1/16" ply - if they come that fine.
Routing around those 900 tiny little 1/16" ply gussets might take a while.......and a few cutters.......
Thanks again for the suggestions - it has helped a lot!! Mark

Kyle Boatright
02-14-2012, 09:18 PM
I cut a zillion different gussets for my (stalled) Hatz project. If you have access to a tablesaw and a scroll saw (or jigsaw), you can go into producton mode.

What you do is plan out cuts on the tablesaw so you can cut same size strips which can be stacked and gang cut into smaller shapes on the scroll or jigsaw. The strip width is determined by one of the dimensions (and the grain orientation) of the gussets you need.

Jeff Point
02-15-2012, 06:47 AM
Try to get your hands on an old, guillotine-style paper cutter like this one:

1594

I made over 1000 little 1X2 gussets with one of these. Cut your 1.2M sheet into long strips with a utility knife, then use this to cut the strips down to size. Look for an old, heavy-duty one.

CraigCantwell
02-15-2012, 01:14 PM
Braywood: If you lay out all the gussets you can on the sheet stock in strips of the same size, like you would for a punchpress, then cut the strips in the table saw, you could then use the mitrebox to cut the individual gussets from the strip. Think of laying them out like pictures on a roll of film.

Sam Buchanan
02-15-2012, 10:08 PM
Try to get your hands on an old, guillotine-style paper cutter like this one:

1594

I made over 1000 little 1X2 gussets with one of these. Cut your 1.2M sheet into long strips with a utility knife, then use this to cut the strips down to size. Look for an old, heavy-duty one.

The paper cutter works great. Here it is in action cutting the rib gussets for my Legal Eagle XL project:

1597

Sam Buchanan
EAA Technical Counselor
http://thervjournal.com
http://eaglexl-58.com

ChrisK
02-17-2012, 06:45 AM
Another vote for a paper cutter. For gussets and small parts it's really the best and easiest method. I have heard that a hose cutter (which is really a sharper version of pruning shears) works well but I haven't tried one.

Chris