I love this forum. There is always wisdom and enthusiam in abundance. Jeremiah, you are lucky this board is Sapele. I always want my boards rough cut, so I get my full thickness.
I generally cut to guitar length and width, then I head for the abrasive planer. I kiss both sides and see where I am and try to completely clear the outside pieces before cutting. This one procedure alone has made resawing a joy. It just helps when everything is flat and pretty.
Jointed edges are great at least on the bottom of the piece, but I like the top too, for one reason. My marking of cuts done near the very end. There is a cool way to mark a board perfectly for resawing too. I learned it somewhere along the way.
TAke a piece of small wood, top cutoff about six inches long is good. Then using a ruler, mark it every half inch or 3/8 inch along the side, it doesn't matter. You determine how many cuts you want to attempt, then put the homemade ruler across the board edge at an angle, leaving the number of marks you want to cut, within the board sides. Marking the edge of the board of course.
You can then use a pencil as a guage and run that mark to the end of the board. So on say 6/4 you end up with five marks, then five parallel marks on the top edge of the board. These become your cut lines. Stray over one of them, you know you have to make adjustments for the remaining cuts.
The thickness sander takes it from there getting you consistent thickness pieces for the guitar. It's work, but it's rewarding to take planks and make guitar wood. Did anyone see LMI's big ol' bandsaw behind Chris's picture?
