I have run plastic laminate through my table saw.  I put a fine tooth
plywood blade in it, then go slowly through.
I agree, that it should be cut a little over size and trimmed with the
router bit.  I've never tried the file, but that might work well too.
Blessings,
Tom

  -----Original Message-----
  From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Scott Howell
  Sent: Monday, August 18, 2008 7:57 AM
  To: [email protected]
  Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] sharp cutting tool


  THankws, I figured that a saw would likely make more a mess and that
  is also why I avoided using it. I wasn't so sure about snapping it as
  I wasn't totally sure it would snap the way I intended. The stuff
  wasn't horribly expensive, but I don't want to wast a lot of material
  either. Maybe I'll glue this piece I have on and file it down to the
  right size and yeah, I thought of the router, but of course I don't
  have a bit for that so the slow road it is for the minute.
  Thanks again.

  On Aug 18, 2008, at 7:30 AM, Dale Leavens wrote:

  > You score the Formica along a straight line usually then just bend
  > it up to snap it off. The edge is very sharp usually. You should cut
  > it a little large then when stuck down you trim it down to precise
  > size. These days people usually use an edge trimming bit on a router
  > but a file sliding along the edge on a slight angle works equally
  > well if slower and I find I often finish with a file anyway.
  >
  > There is a special hooked knife with a carbide tip which drags along
  > very nicely and scores the material however the tip of a sharp
  > utility knife works well enough too.
  >
  > Sawing tends to chip and even crack the Formica or Arborite unless
  > it is well stuck down already and generally works better cutting
  > from the opposite side.
  >
  > Hope this helps.
  >
  > ----- Original Message -----
  > From: Scott Howell
  > To: [email protected]
  > Sent: Monday, August 18, 2008 5:34 AM
  > Subject: [BlindHandyMan] sharp cutting tool
  >
  > Folks, I know this will sound a little crazy, but I'm trying to cut a
  > piece of material with a utility knife and it just doesn't seem to be
  > doing the job. Now this is a new blade, but let me explain what I'm
  > cutting and how I'm cutting it and maybe the how and what are the
  > problem.
  >
  > I purchased a sheet of material I believe it's formica, the same stuff
  > most counter tops are made from. I need to cut this to fit the end of
  > the counter top I am using as a desk. The guy at the store said a
  > utility knife should do the trick. I've made a few passes and then
  > tried digging in to cut through, but seems the knife first of all
  > wants to skid around on the surface and just scratch the material. I
  > then tried a really sharp pair of scissors which did help, but weren't
  > really sharp enough. Now I realize I could get my Dremmel or even
  > possibly my jig saw out, but I really was looking for a manual non-
  > powered tool for such a simple task. So, the question is, do they make
  > scissors that could be used for cutting material like this or is a
  > utility knife my best option?
  >
  > tnx
  >
  > Scott Howell
  > [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  >
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  >

  Scott Howell
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]

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