After many tries using as many different tools and methods I can think of and have available to me, I'm at a real frustration point with trying to get things flat. This includes bolster materials (stainless bar stock, etc.), wood handle scales, etc., etc. The tools I have tried are belt grinder on a flat platen, cheap small fast disc grinder on my Craftsman belt/disc combo, palm sander with hard plate mounted upside down in a bench vise, and by hand with sandpaper on a flat surface.
I occasionally have success, but I often end up with results that I'm not happy with and there doesn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to it as far as I can tell. Sometimes things may get a relatively flat surface from my efforts, but they are not of uniform thickness afterwards. Sometimes things end up bowed either high in the center (convex) or low in the center (concave.) I just can't seem to come up with the right methods to get this right and I'm not even sure what I'm doing wrong in order to correct it.
The latest example of this is after cutting a wood block into scales on my DeWalt portaband (not a perfectly clean, straight cut), I tried evening and flattening them on the belt against the platen. I don't know when it happened, but I ended up with a bowed surface that's high in the middle and low at the edges. If I hold the sanded surfaces of the scales together and squeeze them at the edges on one side, they roll together at that edge and away from each other at the opposite side. I've tried sanding it by hand, and also tried on my palm sander to get it flat, but it still looks exactly the same after my efforts.
If anyone has any tips for getting things good and flat that are easily shared over the internet, I'd be very grateful for the help. Thanks in advance for any assistance!
I occasionally have success, but I often end up with results that I'm not happy with and there doesn't seem to be any rhyme or reason to it as far as I can tell. Sometimes things may get a relatively flat surface from my efforts, but they are not of uniform thickness afterwards. Sometimes things end up bowed either high in the center (convex) or low in the center (concave.) I just can't seem to come up with the right methods to get this right and I'm not even sure what I'm doing wrong in order to correct it.
The latest example of this is after cutting a wood block into scales on my DeWalt portaband (not a perfectly clean, straight cut), I tried evening and flattening them on the belt against the platen. I don't know when it happened, but I ended up with a bowed surface that's high in the middle and low at the edges. If I hold the sanded surfaces of the scales together and squeeze them at the edges on one side, they roll together at that edge and away from each other at the opposite side. I've tried sanding it by hand, and also tried on my palm sander to get it flat, but it still looks exactly the same after my efforts.
If anyone has any tips for getting things good and flat that are easily shared over the internet, I'd be very grateful for the help. Thanks in advance for any assistance!