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Stabilize Your Work with Woodworking Clamps

by: rfg5bfwtdh | Total views: 6 | Word Count: 497 | Date: Fri, 12 Mar 2010 Time: 7:43 AM | 0 comments

Few people will ever be born with three arms, and even fewer consumers can resist the enticement of extra toys. Due to these two simple axioms, woodworkers shall always be in search of more exotic clamps. Prior to setting out on the quest for the one of a kind clamp, though, you should make sure your clamp collection has all the general needs covered first. You should have three types of clamps which will help you through many woodworking tasks; the bar clamp, the C-clamp and the band clamp. Be sure to check out the different Air Compressors & Air Tools.

Bar clamps are perhaps the most common clamps associated with woodworking. They have an adjustable jaw, a pipe or bar of different dimensions, and a second jaw that will slide along the bar. The second jaw can be fixed at a point against the bar, and the adjustable jaw may be fine-tuned with a hand screw.

Bar clamps are very handy for woodworking as a result of their ability to accommodate wide or narrow projects. Pony brand steel bar clamps are resilient and reasonably priced options for the amateur woodworker since they are simple to attach and detach and the multiple-disc clutch will secure the adjustable jaw firmly at any position along the bar. Also, be sure not to miss the different Industrial Compressors.

C-clamps can also be particularly convenient for woodworking, but they are really more widely used than bar clamps for the reason that C-clamps are often employed by plumbers and metallurgists too. C-clamps are made from a large piece of metal which resembles a "C", and a flat metal pad mounted on the end of a hand screw. Since C-clamps are usually made from cast iron, a woodworker must protect his materials by using pads between the clamp pads and the project surface. In case you ever plan to invest in a few Irwin Quick-Grip C-clamps, these models already have over sized swivel pads that prevent marring while simultaneously adding to the clamp's stability.

Band clamps are what woodworkers reach for when rigidclamps don't work. The essential style of band clamp is an extremely long piece of strong webbing which is attached to a "buckle" with a ratcheting cinch. The band could be wrapped around the outside of irregular shapes, passed through the buckle and tightened with the cinch. Jorgenson makes a very basic band clamp with a 15 foot band and ratcheting cinch. If you need something with corner clips for use with picture frames, Merle markets a clamp with pivoting jaws as well as quick release corners.

Clamping and gluing are practically always an important part in any woodworking venture, so you may as well have some good clamps on hand normally. Naturally, a woodworker isn't confined to the three forms of clamps you just read about, but they ought to comprise the central group of your quickly increasing selection of woodworking clamps.

About the Author

Omar Rashad runs and manages an Air Compressor Review Site that informs consumers about the different kinds of Industrial Compressors and much more.

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