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  2. Router (woodworking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Router_(woodworking)

    The CNC Machine can be either a moving gantry style, where the table is fixed and the router spindle moves over it, or fixed bridge design, where the table moves underneath the router spindle, or hand-held style, where the operator moves the machine to the area to be cut and the machine controls the fine adjustments.

  3. CNC wood router - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNC_wood_router

    Cutting bit rotation speeds on metal working equipment is typically too slow to produce good results in wood. Typical wood piece before router cutting Typical work done by a CNC wood router. A CNC wood router is a CNC router tool that creates objects from wood. CNC stands for computer numerical control. The CNC works on the Cartesian coordinate ...

  4. CNC router - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CNC_router

    CNC routers can perform the tasks of many carpentry shop machines such as the panel saw, the spindle moulder, and the boring machine. They can also cut joinery such as mortises and tenons. A CNC router is very similar in concept to a CNC milling machine. Instead of routing by hand, tool paths are controlled via computer numerical control.

  5. Ripsaw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ripsaw

    With the "rip" tooth pattern, the edges are sharpened at right angles to the cutting plane, forming chisel-like cutting surfaces, whereas crosscut teeth are sharpened at an angle, so that each tooth has a knife-like cutting point in contact with the wood. [1]

  6. Jointer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jointer

    Notice the Infeed and outfeed table heights relative to the high speed rotating cutting blades. A jointer or in some configurations, a jointer-planer (also known in the UK and Australia as a planer or surface planer , and sometimes also as a buzzer or flat top ) is a woodworking machine used to produce a flat surface along a board's length.

  7. File (tool) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_(tool)

    A single-cut file has one set of parallel teeth while a cross-cut or double-cut file has a second set of cuts forming diamond shaped cutting surfaces. [1] In Swiss-pattern files the teeth are cut at a shallower angle, and are graded by number, with a number 1 file being coarser than a number 2, etc.