I can't decide if I am simply impaired when tolerances go past 1/4" or if others have the same issues I do but they know how to overcome them.
In working on my take down I not only found out that I am 23 lbs underweight but one limb bends nicely while the other doesn't. I tried sanding some width off the stiff limb but I just isn't changing. So I start measuring and found the stiffer limb is actually narrower than the other. Good times. So I break out the mic and sure enough, the stiff area is thicker by a considerable amount.
I am pretty exasperated at this point so I decided to set those limbs aside and start another set. Here is where it gets even more frustrating. In sanding the veneers I take measurements as I go,they read like a roller coaster, fluctuating from .038 to .042 and everywhere in between checking every 3"-4" down the veneer. Not only that, running two veneers at a time on the same sled, one will come out thicker than the other by .002ish.
I then put a straight edge on my sled and the dang thing is not flat. I really don't get that, it's made from 3/4" plywood that I made like an I beam with two horizontal (top and bottom) and two uprights between them. That should not warp. Granted, I don't think you could put a sheet of paper in the gap I see, but I can see light now where I could not before.
I have a Grizzly drum sander that, for the price, should be more than capable of doing what I want to do. I just keep wondering if it's the design of the tool. It does not have pressure rollers to hold the material down, it has two spring pressured plates.
There is probably more to this but that is all I will plague you with for now. If anyone has advice they wish to share I am most ready to listen.
As I was proof reading this a thought hit me, I wonder if the sander needs to be stationary to get it set correctly. I have it on a mobile stand at the moment.