Question
I have a cabinet and millwork shop in Georgia. We plane and rip lumber that customers bring to us. Some of it is reclaimed heart pine and some of it is new sawn pine lumber.
I have a Baxter Whitney No. 32 30" planer. It has a four knife cutterhead in it. This planer definitely does not have any trouble cutting the wood, but it does have a problem cutting the wood smoothly on a decent amount of lumber. I am running high speed steel straight knives in the planer. We have been trying different angles of grind, but I am not able to keep the knives cutting the lumber smooth. The last angle grind that we tried was 28.8 degrees. There are four knives in the cutterhead.
After I take the knives out and have them sharpened, they start to leave little ripples in the lumber after only a few boards have been run through the machine. For some reason, the edge keeps getting taken off of the knife right away.
I don't have a knife bar and grinder on my planer right now, but I just don't understand why the edge keeps getting taken off of the knives so fast. I would really love to be able to plane the lumber and have the lumber come out smooth. I don't know if a helical cutterhead would solve the problem or not. And I have considered using carbide knives, but I am cautious about them because there is always the possibility of hitting a nail in this old lumber.
Forum Responses
(Solid Wood Machining Forum)
From contributor D:
I know how you feel. The problem with your current setup is probably due to the knives not all being set to cut the same circle. I would immediately switch to a SHELIX head. If you nicked a carbide insert with a nail, you only change the affected inserts.
Do not let sand, dirt, grit or anything else contact your lumber. Even standing the boards on end on the concrete floor allows dirt to stick to the surface and nick the knives.
I have had two different places sharpen my knives numerous times. I know that one of the companies uses CNC machinery to grind the knives. The other person probably uses the same type of equipment. The last time, I had a guy sharpen my knives who has been sharpening knives for a company like Georgia Pacific. He has been sharpening a big lumber company's knives for about 30 or 40 years.
Thank you to those who have already contributed. I definitely am going to check into possibly getting a Shelix cutterhead for my planer.
Try to find a grinding facility that grinds your knives parallel to the cutting length and under full flood coolant. You will be able to tell the difference by looking at the back of the cutting edges. The grind marks will go in the same direction as the length of the knives.
Some shops even use super abrasives like CBN to grind high speed knives under coolant, as CBN is standard with much finer grits.
Byrd Manufacturing cannot make a cutterhead for any machine that has a tapered journal design, but fortunately for me Woodmaster sells the Shelix type (each insert is angled, not parallel to the wood) spiral head. I don't know if your machine has tapered journals, but if not, you should make the jump to a spiral head even if you can't get the Shelix type. It is night and day as to eliminating tearout and also how much easier your motor runs on wide stuff.
I have run 25" hardwood through the old HSS and the Shelix type head and the difference in how the motor sounds - it's like it works as easy on a 25" board as the HSS did on a 12" wide board or less. Just can't emphasize enough the difference. Just do it, you will never look back.