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giving up

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Kangum:
came pretty close to starting a project. had the tools ready. bought the wood and measured it 4 times. had to cut with a jig saw because it had to many curves. came out terrible. jig saw even following a line was hard to control even going slow. i dont know maybe it was the blade i was using.

thinking of just scrapping this bartop project. its alot harder then folks here make it seem. I may clamp the sides together and belt sand the curves. see if it helps. very frustrated now. the pencil mark for my cuts came out way better then i could have hoped. i just couldnt control the saw well enough to make it happen.

aargh...

nuka1195:
skil is a brand, if you mean a circular saw, those aren't meant for curves.

Kangum:
fixed my post now to be more clear sorry. really annoyed and wasnt thinking

Havok:
Clamps and sanding are your friend. Or, just buy an old arcade game and refurb that...

nuka1195:
a good jigsaw with a good blade makes a difference. The best jigsaw i've ever used was a bosch. Even with that to get perfect edges sanding was necessary.

I would plan on sanding, if you went inside your line, can you make it a fraction smaller.

I went to the expense of buying a separate sheet of mdf, just to make a pattern for the sides.  Some use the one side as the pattern, so just keep working it until you're happy, then use it as a template for the other side.

And yes, some on here sure do make it look easy.

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