Operation; Spline Joinery; Turnig The Biscuit Joiner On/Off; Operating The Biscuit Joiner - Craftsman 17550 - 3.5 Amp Detail Biscuit Jointer Operator's Manual

Detail biscuit joiner double insulated
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A
A
WARNING:
Do not allow familiarity with tools
to make you careless. Remember that a careless
fraction of a second is sufficient to inflict serious
injury.
A
WARNING:
Always wear safety goggles or safety
glasses with side shields when operating power
tools. Failure to do so could result in objects being
thrown into your eyes resulting in possible serious
injury.
A
WARNING:
Always use a firm grip with both hands
and clamp your workpiece securely when operating
the biscuit joiner, to avoid loss of control and pos-
sible serious injury.
APPLICATIONS
You may use this tool for the purposes listed below:
Cutting precise mating oval slots in hard wood, soft wood,
plywood and particle board
SPLINE JOINERY
Spline joinery is one of the strongest methods of joinery
used in woodworking.
When glue is properly applied to a
spline and to the joint area of the wood pieces being con-
nected, a large surface area receives the adhesion proper-
ties of the glue. This forms a strong joint.
Traditional spline joinery requires cutting slots with a
router or table saw. Small, thin strips of wood must then
be cut to fit inside the slots and act as splines.
Newer methods of spline joinery use a plate or biscuit
joiner to cut precise mating oval slots in adjoining boards.
This biscuit joiner is a fast, simple, and accurate plunge-
cutting tool that can be used to cut slots in hardwood,
softwood,
plywood, particle board, and other pressed
woods.
Football shaped wafers, called biscuits, are then placed
inside the slots with glue and used to help line up ad-
joining surfaces. When a water based glue is used, the
biscuits swell in the joint, making an extremely strong and
firm bond. White glue, yellow glue, carpenters glue, hide
glue, and aliphatic resin glue are examples of water-based
glues. This bonding technique has traditionally
been lim-
ited to making edge-to-edge
joints. However, with the use
of this biscuit joiner, biscuits can now be easily used to
connect butt, miter, and T-joints. Biscuit joining can be as
strong as mortise and tenon, tongue and groove, stan-
dard spline, and doweled joints. In most cases the mate-
rial around the biscuit will break before the biscuit itself
will break. A greater surface area is exposed to glue in a
biscuit joint, making the seams stronger.
A variety of spline joints can be made using the biscuit
joiner. The number and size biscuits needed for each joint
depends on the thickness of the wood and the length
of the joint. In general, the small #R1 biscuits should be
used for miter cuts in 3/4 in. materials. The larger biscuits
should be used for edge-to-edge
joinery.
TURNING
THE BISCUIT
JOINER
ON/OFF
See Figure 2.
To turn on the biscuit joiner, depress the switch trigger.
Release the switch trigger to turn the biscuit joiner off.
SWITCH
TRIGGER
Fig. 2
OPERATING
THE BISCUIT
JOINER
See Figure 3.
When operating the biscuit joiner, hold the tool with both
hands. Keep one hand on the rear handle and place your
other hand on the top and front portion of the motor hous-
ing.
CAUTION:
Avoid hand positions that cover the air
vents on the motor housing of the tool. Covering the
air vents can cause motor burnout.
PROPERHANDPOSITION
REARHANDLE
TOP OFTOOL
10

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