johnnyb
Established Member
I have used them and they look OK but I do discourage there use( working alone makes you unproductive enough without falsehood!)
not by hand I use a mortar joint cutter from wealden and a crosscut sled on the router table. works well and you only need to buy the cutter.
the morso is perfection but pricey(few thousand used) the bead is done after the joI much preferint and I much prefer wealden mini moulder beads. they fit on an arbor and leave a much cleaner
@Jonnyb I agree that a sharper point looks best on the beading - I must try those mimi-mould cutters - I notice though that the inner cut is angled rather than square as in the normal beading cutters.not by hand I use a mortar joint cutter from wealden and a crosscut sled on the router table. works well and you only need to buy the cutter.
the morso is perfection but pricey(few thousand used) the bead is done after the joI much preferint and I much prefer wealden mini moulder beads. they fit on an arbor and leave a much cleaner finish.
The top 2 cutters - why those instead of say a 6.4mm beading bit?here's my set up along with the bits used.
Sorry mate - probably still get getting it (probably been on the work laptop staring at 1's & 0's too long).
Cheers for that Johnny.sorry the 2 mini mould cutter are just 2 different sized beads. just to repeat wwhyi likelthem. Little bead cutters tend to pluck the edge adjacent to the bead. it's a subtle thing but becomes annoying. they just cut better as well. I would do these on a spindle tbh but I drop on/ off around the bottom legs. the spindle tends to stray into the leg a bit ruining the effect. the arbors are really useful accepting decent size three wing groovers complete with bearings.
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