Wood Working Machines
Woodworking machines are powered machines designed to cut, shape, and finish wood and wood-based materials. These include saws (table saws, band saws, circular saws), planers, jointers, sanders, drills, routers, and lathes (for wood turning) among others. In general, a woodworking machine mechanically processes lumber or panels according to set dimensions. As noted, “a woodworking machine is a machine that is intended to process wood” and is usually motor-driven.
Type of Product
Woodworking machines can be classified by operation and automation level:
- Stationary vs Portable: Stationary machines are floor-mounted (table saws, jointers, sanding stations). Portable power tools include hand-held routers, drills, and circular saws.
- Function: Cutting (saws, CNC routers), shaping (planers, shapers), joining (dovetail machines), finishing (sanders, polishers). Each performs a different operation on wood.
- CNC vs Manual: Traditional mechanical machines require manual feed. Modern CNC woodworking machines (like CNC routers) are computer-controlled for high precision and repeatability. (A specific CNC router is covered separately below.)
- Single- vs Multi-Purpose: Some equipment is single-task (e.g. a miter saw), while others are multi-purpose (e.g. CNC machining centers, combination jointers-planers).
- Size/Scale: Hobbyist bench-top tools up to industrial cabinetmaking systems or panel lines.
Applications in Various Industries
Woodworking machines are used wherever wood products are made or processed:
- Furniture and Cabinetry: Cutting and shaping wood for cabinets, furniture frames, doors. CNC routers carve decorative panels.
- Construction: Producing lumber components, moldings, flooring, and structural wood elements.
- Joinery and Millwork: Creating window frames, trim, stair parts.
- Packaging and Pallets: Cutting wood for crates, pallets, and other packaging.
- Musical Instruments and Crafts: Precise cutting for guitars, violins, carvings.
- DIY and Hobbyist: Smaller routers, scroll saws, and lathes for hobby projects.
Material Selection Considerations
Key machine components are chosen for rigidity, durability, and wear resistance:
- Frames and Beds: Heavy machines often use cast iron or steel castings for the frame to damp vibrations. This provides stability during cutting.
- Table Tops and Fences: May be cast iron, aluminum, or steel (for durability and flatness).
- Cutting Tools: Saws and cutters are made of high-carbon steel or carbide-tipped steel for hardness and long life when cutting wood.
- Mechanical Components: Shafts and bearings are steel; belts may be rubber or PU; knobs and levers often steel or reinforced plastic.
- Corrosion Protection: Surfaces may be coated or painted to resist humidity in workshops.