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laminate cutting on Table saw


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Well was supposed to be formica but this stuff breaks with just looking at it.  It is very thin laminate from Home Depot supposedly formica.

I am putting this over plywood which will be sanded smooth with all cracks and holes sealed with plastic wood.

The laminate/plywood will be used and outfeed and in feed tables to be BS for me to process logs.

It may have hundreds of pounds on it at any given time.

 

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Ignore the red circles, they were different application.  Do notice the edges of the top before Formica was added.   I prefer to not try and glue to edged plywood or MDF but use poplar instead.  Better bond with the glue in my opinion.  

 

This picture was preparing the dust collection ports for my table saws before mounting.

 

 

 

 

 

dustcollection.jpg.0cac67260858acc5a68c3c273d3f103a.jpg

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2 hours ago, lew said:

Not sure if this helps but when doing vinyl siding, you put the circular saw blade on backwards. Cuts without chipping. 

I'll vouch for this. Can be a little iffy if ambient air is below 32°. I always used an 80t plywood blade on my RAS.

2 hours ago, Ron Dudelston said:

Attach blue painters tape along the cut line and use an 80 tooth blade.

Yep, this has worked well for me at least on MDF/ particle board panels with laminate pre-applied.

 

If you're planning to make lots of cuts, you may want to invest in one of THESE.

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Like Gunny basically said, cut it wild a half inch or so, glue it down, then flush trim it with a router. You are only rough cutting it on the table saw, use a fine tooth blade for laminate or plywood it'll work just fine, make sure the lead edge is firm flat on the in-feed so it doesn't jump and grab when the blade touches the laminate, then feed it steady, you'll get little chips but it don't matter, those will disappear when you flush trim it after glue up.

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I have always used the tablesaw and using Gunny's method the router will take off any chips.  I raise the blade so it just breaks the surface and as was said keep the sheet flat on the saw, push blocks can help with  this. Push blocks unlike push sticks have a wide flat surface which presses the material down.

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Thanks all leaving 1/2" over was also my plan then flush trim router then very carefully trim a 30 to 45 chamfer to the formica to prevent the logs from ripping it up.

Also I will then mill with a 3/4" bit and 3/4" wide and 3/8" deep to act as a pilot for the hardwood runner under the slab fixture.

The will take very critical alignment on the infeed and out feed tables to the band saw slot.

The rough cut will first be tested with my 80 tooth blade and see how much chip I get if too much tape it or add a sacrificial piece on top to keep the laminate frozen to that it cannot be chipped.  Before milling my slot I will make sure the bond is fully cured.

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