Rotary Cutting
Rotary cutting is the most economical veneer slicing method, in which the entire log is mounted on a lathe, and turned against a
stationary knife. This essentially peels the log into a single, contiguous sheet. Provided that the width of the resultant sheet
is sufficient, this method can be used to produce single-piece faces, covering an entire panel without seams. Rotary cut veneers
exibit a wide, erratic grain pattern, making joint matching difficult. A variation of rotary cutting called half round slicing
instead uses a half log flitch, and produces veneers with both rotary cut, and plain sliced characteristics.
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