OK, I know this has to be flawed in some way, but I'm going to throw it out
there anyway.
I've got a JBOS-5, folks with Delta's BOSS should be able to do it too.
Take an old router base with PC size bushing capability, cut it to fit the
hole in the table, then use a suitably-sized spindle, clamp the piece to the
pattern below as if routing, and pattern sand against the bushing to avoid
tearout on stuff like oak and in places where the piece would have to be cut
up the easily splitable short grain. Sort of like the Robosander, but
oscillating, so no burn.
What do you think? I think I'm going to try it on that next cradle.
Don't see why it wouldn't work if you make the correct offset allowance on
the template for the bush and spindle sizes, George. Let us know how it
goes!
Cheers
Frank
"George" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> OK, I know this has to be flawed in some way, but I'm going to throw it
out
> there anyway.
>
> I've got a JBOS-5, folks with Delta's BOSS should be able to do it too.
> Take an old router base with PC size bushing capability, cut it to fit the
> hole in the table, then use a suitably-sized spindle, clamp the piece to
the
> pattern below as if routing, and pattern sand against the bushing to
avoid
> tearout on stuff like oak and in places where the piece would have to be
cut
> up the easily splitable short grain. Sort of like the Robosander, but
> oscillating, so no burn.
>
> What do you think? I think I'm going to try it on that next cradle.
>
>