Tiki Central / Tiki Carving
roughing out w/ router
Pages: 1 10 replies
MG
Mr Greenjeans
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Mon, Dec 13, 2010 7:16 PM
This is my first post. I am working on my first tiki carving. The wood I am using is A. sycamore. I decided to rough our the negative spaces with a router. This is a pretty unwieldy way to remove material. I was just wondering have any of yous guys approached a carving in this way? If not how do you go about removing large bits of material. Gouges? I am really inspired by the tikis on this forum. Incredible stuff. I hope to figure out how to post pics of my hunk a wood soon. |
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4WDtiki
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Mon, Dec 13, 2010 7:22 PM
I rough out with a chainsaw. Most carvers here use chisels. Never heard of using a router on anything but flatwork. What other tools do you own? Can't help you on the wood, all I use is palm. Welcome to the forum! |
MG
Mr Greenjeans
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Mon, Dec 13, 2010 7:39 PM
I have an incomplete set of gouges and some carving knives. Most tools required for carpentry as well. I have a chainsaw too. I carved a mushroom out of a piece of cedar with the chainsaw a few weeks back but I would be scared to carve anything that required a lot of detail with a chainsaw. I could turn it into a chunk of firewood pretty quickly. Thanks for the reply. |
MG
Mr Greenjeans
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Mon, Dec 13, 2010 9:02 PM
Here are a couple of pics of my tiki so far. This is just router work and a little bit of gouge work. |
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4WDtiki
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Tue, Dec 14, 2010 5:17 AM
Wow, looks like the router works fine for "roughing", it leaves a nice clean cut. |
K
Kino
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Tue, Dec 14, 2010 1:53 PM
Like 4wd said, nice clean cuts with the router. Chop On ! |
MG
Mr Greenjeans
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Tue, Dec 14, 2010 4:17 PM
Thanks Kino and 4WD. I will be shopping for a tungsten wheel for the angle grinder. |
A
amate
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Sun, Dec 19, 2010 2:18 PM
Hello Greenjeans and welcome. I live in San Marcos and have carved most of the common hill country species. All have disadvantages as well as virtues. Seasoning the wood is still a mystery to me but I am convinced the time of year it's cut has a lot to do with how bad the wood checks and I've learned to only carve seasoned wood. I never turn down a sound, straight-grained sycamore, cottonwood, cedar elm or hackberry. I've only done a couple of pine but don't have a problem with it so far. Happy carving. |
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tikisobayli
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Wed, Dec 22, 2010 11:11 AM
I always use a router for roughing out tikis. They work really well and always leave a clean edge. I used a router on all of these guys: http://www.tikicentral.com/viewtopic.php?mode=viewtopic&topic=18642&forum=7&start=60 I gotta get back to carving...been awhile |
B
Benzart
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Mon, Jan 31, 2011 6:33 PM
Well I agree with the others it looks like the router works great for you. My Personal Philosophy is to use ANY Tool that removes the wood the easiest and the fastest. I would try All your tools for different stages as right now or from the last photo, you are ready for chisels to clean up the lines and finish the Detail. |
GP
Grand Poobah
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Tue, Feb 1, 2011 6:51 PM
It looks like you're doing well with the router. I tried to carve my first tiki with a router. I thought it would be easy. I have made a lot of cabinetry, furniture etc. I found that while it leaves a clean cut but the router tends to run on me. It was very different, for me, than a flat board. I felt it was too risky for me and the log. I also started with oak. If it works for you (it looks like it does..nicely too) then stick with it. |
Pages: 1 10 replies