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1/16" Round Over Bit

10K views 29 replies 17 participants last post by  subtleaccents 
#1 ·
I was glancing through an article on roundover bits and it mentioned using a 1/16" roundover bit to soften edges. I have usually done this with a just a fine sanding block. Should I get the 1/16" roundover bit for this?
 
#2 ·
I'd think the sanding method would suffice. I use the foam sanding blocks.
 
#3 ·
give those edges to Gene...
he's the man w/ the plan...
 
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#14 ·
I did say normally. Depends on the project. But actually, the sound of the ROS is relaxing to me, more relaxing than knocking edges off by hand. Goes well with the classical music station my radio is kept on.
 
#11 ·
Veritas make a cornering tool that rounds over the corners to a fixed depth. It’s a simple set of hand tools for creating 1/16, 1/8, 3/16 or 1/4 round overs. Just wanted to give everyone a heads up on an elegant solution if you weren’t aware that the tool existed.

http://www.leevalley.com/us/wood/page.aspx?p=32682&cat=1,230,41182,41200



In woodworking there is always more then one way to accomplish something.
 
#16 ·
Now that you've seen the pictures Charles, you'll need to be liquidated... ;)

(Garage, toolshed, woodshed; pretty much all the same issue. )
we gonna have a shop (estate type sale)at pennies on the dollar prices...
I'm in...
 
#19 ·
The Veritas cornering tools are more finicky than I expected. In hard splintery wood, the angle of the tool is critical, and can result in a fistful of splinters, or no cutting at all. A smooth rounding generally escapes me, but that is probably just me. My edges land up looking like goldilocks' porridge - full of lumps.
The little plane Stick referenced, would be a better bet, I think.
 
#23 ·
I have a Makita 3" power planer that has a groove down the center of the sole that is that for making chamfers. As Rob says, a chamfer is a good start for rounding the edge. I don't know if there any hand planes that have a similar groove in the sole.
 
#25 ·
Most of the 1/16" radius router bits have a 1/2" bearing. If you are breaking the edge of parts that have inside radius less than 1/4" your back to sanding by hand. In my case the parts that need to have the sharp edge broken on small radius inside corners, I have a buffer set up with stacked 320 grit 3" x 9" finger sanding strips. Gets into the small inside corners with ease as well as outside. If it is long straight edge that need a broken edge it's back to a trim router with the 1/16" radius router bit and a light touch with 400 paper to remove the fine chatter left by the router.
 
#28 ·
I've never seen one that small either, 1/8" is the smallest I have. My go-to supplier goes down to 2.5mm, 3/32". But they do have this interesting new "arris rounding" bit down to 1.5mm:
https://www.wealdentool.com/acatalog/Online_Catalogue_Arris_Rounding_964.html
Like a round-over, but with a very slight chamfer on either side of the curve so that the corner of the bit can't dig in and leave a line. I'm guessing it's aimed at production scenarios where it would save time compared to sanding.
 
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