Thanks. Any complaints or advice on operation? Know where to get cheap
knives for it?
From: <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Advice on Planer.
Date: Wednesday, December 14, 2005 10:11 PM
Mine's been going strong with no problems for 8 or 9 years.
As mentioned on the other thread, you will want chip collection. I ran
mine connected to a shop vac for a while... worked fine for a few
minutes at a time until something plugged up or filled up. A real DC is
a good thing.
Knives seem to run about $25-30 everywhere. I haven't found them
cheaper.
Snipe is an issue with this planer. If you look at rec.ww postings or
magazine articles from 5 or more years ago, you'll see lots of info on
building extension tables and other labor intensive solutions that
sort-of fix the snipe problem. I've always taken the lazy solution,
which is just to plane boards to thickness before cutting to length,
and waste a few inches at the ends. If you're planing a particularly
precious piece of lumber, you can always run some sacrificial longer
boards alongside
Never thought of sacrificial boards alongside, KK. That is a good idea.
I had a company that sharpens all sorts of things say that they didn't
sharpen the blades for this planer because of the quality of the steel. I
take that to mean that the steel is of too low quality to sharpen.
ko.
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> As mentioned on the other thread, you will want chip collection. I ran
> mine connected to a shop vac for a while... worked fine for a few
> minutes at a time until something plugged up or filled up. A real DC is
> a good thing.
>
> Knives seem to run about $25-30 everywhere. I haven't found them
> cheaper.
>
> Snipe is an issue with this planer. If you look at rec.ww postings or
> magazine articles from 5 or more years ago, you'll see lots of info on
> building extension tables and other labor intensive solutions that
> sort-of fix the snipe problem. I've always taken the lazy solution,
> which is just to plane boards to thickness before cutting to length,
> and waste a few inches at the ends. If you're planing a particularly
> precious piece of lumber, you can always run some sacrificial longer
> boards alongside
>