I am cutting plywood rings that will stack and assemble to make a cone for a wood dust cyclone I want to construct. I have to chamfer the outside edge and inside edge of each of the 62 rings to 15 degrees to make the hollow cone.
I am not finding chamfer bits that do not have some flat bottom or bearing and I was not wanting any flat section.
If my rings are half inch do I just find a chamfer bit that is longer and use the middle section?
Also, what is the work flow recommended for cutting these rings. I imagine I could cut them first using a circle jig on a bandsaw, cut the inside of the rings with a jig saw, but then am at a loss how to stabilize the router to cut a circle. There would be no inside to set the router circle jig into. It is sort of like wanting to cut the branch of a tree and not getting on the wrong side of the cut. I could use a router to cut them and then change bits to chamfer them, etc. etc. What makes the most sense to get through 62 rings of increasing size, 6" to 22" over 30" length.
Thanking all in advance.
I am not finding chamfer bits that do not have some flat bottom or bearing and I was not wanting any flat section.
If my rings are half inch do I just find a chamfer bit that is longer and use the middle section?
Also, what is the work flow recommended for cutting these rings. I imagine I could cut them first using a circle jig on a bandsaw, cut the inside of the rings with a jig saw, but then am at a loss how to stabilize the router to cut a circle. There would be no inside to set the router circle jig into. It is sort of like wanting to cut the branch of a tree and not getting on the wrong side of the cut. I could use a router to cut them and then change bits to chamfer them, etc. etc. What makes the most sense to get through 62 rings of increasing size, 6" to 22" over 30" length.
Thanking all in advance.