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Eventually some very, very rough-sawn red oak will be used to make a "Wood Sandwich", a 3-board glue-up that will produce a very nice post. For that to work the interior board, the "meat" of the sandwich must have both surfaces perfectly clean and parallel to each other. The two outer boards, the "bread", needs one surface perfect but I still want the outside to be rustic. This is an alternating process between jointers, planers, bandsaws and back around again. The wood to make these MikroPosts had been cut and milled about 4 years ago then stickered out in the field since. A few months ago they were in bad shape so rather than lose them brought them in, let dry for a while then ran surfaces only through a planer. This stopped the bleeding. Now wanting to make nice red oak posts for beds out of them they needing bringing down to workable sizes. In this video I use an alternating combination of a Jet 18" bandsaw, a PowerMatic 8" Jointer and a 12" DeWalt Miter saw to bring the boards to very usable lengths, thickness and width. This is a series of videos documenting the build of multiple prototypes for "MikroRails and "MikroPosts", multi-board GlueUp techniques for Post and Rail woodworking methods common to the building of beds, bunks and dorm-room lofts. Larger versions are also possible for Post and Beam style small structures such as gazebos, screen rooms, sun rooms, firewood shelters, garden sheds etc. When completed in May of 2022 the full tutorial can be found on Instructables.com at my Profile Page at https://www.instructables.com/member/... or in the Let's Build search box at Instructables.com type in "MikroRail" This video is part of a series of tutorials about incorporating "knock-down" functionality into woodworking projects using Mike's patented Threaded Tenon Joinery. It’s About Knock-Down®