I am looking for information for my husband, The Sawdust Man=99. He
would like to know if anyone has any experience with and opinions about
the DeWalt DW735 Heavy-Duty 13" Three Knife, Two Speed Thickness
Planer.
Pro? Con? Durability? Ease of use (as long as you know what you're
doing, which he does)?
Any replies would be appreciated! Thanks in advance!
****************
Be Well,
Julz
> He would like to know if anyone has any experience with and opinions about
> the DeWalt DW735 Heavy-Duty 13" Three Knife, Two Speed Thickness
> Planer.
Best buy if you can afford it. I have an older 2 knife version, it
performs flawlessly, leaves beautiful surface behind. Of course I'm
using it in a home shop environment, so it's not getting too much
abuse.
I'd say my DeWalt is the only tool I wouldn't change if I could start
again. Everything else in my shop could be replaced with a better
quality tool.
Marton
Bought one, love it. Have not run more than a couple bags of chips
through yet. The finishing speed produces a really smooth surface.
Chip extraction is pretty good with a dust collector, only a few each
pass make it out front to be blown off or swept away.
2 more inches would be nice, but then that would be 2" to skinny!
I planned down some 14" Alder to 1/4" the other night a bit at a time,
no problems with feeding.
Alan
they say the limit is 12" for LENGTH to be safe, the alder had been
resawed from scraps tossed at a local lumber supplier. With warp etc,
I cut em short, resawed them, and they made lovely panels inside stile
and rails for a hand tool toolbox I am bringing my tools to the
Training the Hand workshop in Canada with Rob Cosman.
Alan
I've had mine for about a year, and have used it on hard maple,
rosewood, purple heart, koa, alder, and swamp ash. I always use the
slower feed speed, which gives me 192 cuts per inch, IIRC. The boards
come out with a finish like glass.
Excellent planer, very easy to use, and I'm still on the first side of
my first set of knives.
BTW, I use a shop vac connected to the dust port to extract the
chips--works just fine.
At 95 lbs, "Portable" is definitely a stretch on this tool, however. I
mounted it on a stand.
--Steve
IH8FMS wrote:
> I am looking for information for my husband, The Sawdust Man. He
> would like to know if anyone has any experience with and opinions about
> the DeWalt DW735 Heavy-Duty 13" Three Knife, Two Speed Thickness
> Planer.
>
> Pro? Con? Durability? Ease of use (as long as you know what you're
> doing, which he does)?
>
> Any replies would be appreciated! Thanks in advance!
>
> ****************
> Be Well,
> Julz
>
Bill Davis Jr ([email protected]) wrote on Wednesday 22 June 2005 07:17 pm:
> Just wanted to say thanks for re-affirming my purchase of the DW735.
>
> I purchased one about a month ago from a local HD. Since it was the
> first time I opened an account with them I got 10% off plus 12 months
> of no interest.
>
> I have not used it yet as I am still working on getting my small
> workshop setup. With the limited space I have, what is a good rolling
> cart/bench? Or would it be better to build something myself?
>
> With that, if anyone reads this, what is a good dust collection for a
> small one car garage setup? Size of garage is about 9' x 12'+ feet.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Bill
Bill,
I bought the same one late last year. I'm pretty happy with it, although
the blades that came with it were defective (started leaving grooves after
putting two soft pine boards through it). You may want to run a few test
boards through it to make sure you didn't get blades from the bad batch.
If you did, call Dewalt - they sent me two sets of (good) blades.
The Dewalt portable stand is pretty good. It does the job well, but the
bottom part of it is an open frame with flat shelf, i.e. a shelf that
things roll off of when you move the portable stand. I'm going to end up
putting doors and sides on the thing. This is especially important if
you're short on space.
I'd recommend the folding tables, unless you're only doing real short
pieces.
As for dust collection, I'd recommend the Dewalt chip collector and a large
trash can. It's relatively painless to connect and disconnect to your
trash can (unlike a crap Craftsman jointer I have), so it can easily double
as your normal trash can.
--
Michael White "To protect people from the effects of folly is to
fill the world with fools." -Herbert Spencer
I suggest you go to amazon.com and look the unit up. Many customer
comments, several of which are less positive than what I have read on thi=
s
forum. Cheers, JG
IH8FMS wrote:
> I am looking for information for my husband, The Sawdust Man=99. He
> would like to know if anyone has any experience with and opinions about=
> the DeWalt DW735 Heavy-Duty 13" Three Knife, Two Speed Thickness
> Planer.
>
> Pro? Con? Durability? Ease of use (as long as you know what you're
> doing, which he does)?
>
> Any replies would be appreciated! Thanks in advance!
>
> ****************
> Be Well,
> Julz
On Thu, 23 Jun 2005 01:17:51 GMT, Michael White
<[email protected]> wrote:
>> I have not used it yet as I am still working on getting my small
>> workshop setup. With the limited space I have, what is a good rolling
>> cart/bench? Or would it be better to build something myself?
>>
>> With that, if anyone reads this, what is a good dust collection for a
>> small one car garage setup? Size of garage is about 9' x 12'+ feet.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Bill
>
>Bill,
>
>I bought the same one late last year. I'm pretty happy with it, although
>the blades that came with it were defective (started leaving grooves after
>putting two soft pine boards through it). You may want to run a few test
>boards through it to make sure you didn't get blades from the bad batch.
>If you did, call Dewalt - they sent me two sets of (good) blades.
>
>The Dewalt portable stand is pretty good. It does the job well, but the
>bottom part of it is an open frame with flat shelf, i.e. a shelf that
>things roll off of when you move the portable stand. I'm going to end up
>putting doors and sides on the thing. This is especially important if
>you're short on space.
I will check this out, thanks.
>I'd recommend the folding tables, unless you're only doing real short
>pieces.
Already purchased these. HD did not have them. Lowes did.
>As for dust collection, I'd recommend the Dewalt chip collector and a large
>trash can. It's relatively painless to connect and disconnect to your
>trash can (unlike a crap Craftsman jointer I have), so it can easily double
>as your normal trash can.
This is my initial plan for dust/chip collection.
Thanks again,
Bill
In article <[email protected]>, "IH8FMS" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I am looking for information for my husband, The Sawdust Man=99. He
>would like to know if anyone has any experience with and opinions about
>the DeWalt DW735 Heavy-Duty 13" Three Knife, Two Speed Thickness
>Planer.
>
>Pro? Con? Durability? Ease of use (as long as you know what you're
>doing, which he does)?
I've had one for a year and a half - love it. The quality of the cut is far
superior to that of my previous planer (Delta 12.5"). Unlike the Delta, the
knives on the DW735 are wide enough that they can be honed a couple of times
when they get dull; the Delta's knives are far too narrow to permit that. The
fan-forced chip ejection does a great job of keeping the chips away from the
cutterhead.
The only drawbacks I see are price (worth it, though, IMO) and weight. That
sucker is HEAVY! Definitely not something you want to put on a low shelf.
Build or buy a stand, preferably one with wheels, to put it on.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)
Nobody ever left footprints in the sands of time by sitting on his butt.
And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?
"Patrick Conroy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> I built a flip top for mine:
What mechanism are you using for focal points to flip the entire table one.
Steel rod? Nuts and Bolts? Any wear at those points? Planer and Mitre saw
together will add up to quite a bit of weight. I'd expect the planer to
outweigh the mitre saw. Any great difficulty (muscle power needed) spinning
the planer back up when it's upside down?
In article <[email protected]>, JGS <[email protected]> wrote:
> I suggest you go to amazon.com and look the unit up. Many customer
>comments, several of which are less positive than what I have read on this
>forum. Cheers, JG
The negative comments are so FAR removed from my own experiences with the
DW735 that I really have to wonder if the reviewers have an axe to grind with
DeWalt, or if they perhaps reviewed some other machine.
I'm particularly puzzled by the one reviewer's claim that he had to push
boards through the planer, even when removing only 1/64" from narrow boards.
I've put several hundred board feet of lumber through mine, with never a hint
of any trouble with the feed rollers, even when taking off 1/16" on 6" wide
oak.
In regard to the comments about poor cut quality, I will say that I've noticed
that the quality of the finish is not as good on softer woods such as sycamore
as it is on harder woods such as oak or sugar maple - and I'll point out that
the guys complaining about cut quality were using softer wood.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)
Nobody ever left footprints in the sands of time by sitting on his butt.
And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?
IH8FMS says...
> I am looking for information for my husband, The Sawdust Man. He
> would like to know if anyone has any experience with and opinions about
> the DeWalt DW735 Heavy-Duty 13" Three Knife, Two Speed Thickness
> Planer.
>
> Pro? Con? Durability? Ease of use (as long as you know what you're
> doing, which he does)?
>
> Any replies would be appreciated! Thanks in advance!
>
> ****************
> Be Well,
> Julz
I've only had mine for a couple months, but it does work well. Even on
the second best setting, the finish it leaves is beautiful. You really
need the optional ($50) infeed/outfeed table kit for best ease of
operation, but some people claim to get by without it. They pretty much
eliminate snipe, which I often got before purchasing the tables. It is
very loud and heavy, but no more than a dozen other power tools. Heavy
is good because it has a much more substantial chassis than other
portable planers, not that the DW735 is very portable at about 100 lbs.
It couldn't be much easier to use--very intuitive. If it has a con it
would be the knives, which cost $50 a set and aren't supposed to be
sharpened, but I see that some people do. But the knives are double
sided so you get to flip them once before you toss them. Common wisdom
here is that cost for replacement knives isn't a great deal more than
paying a service to sharpen the knives from a traditional stationary
planer. I'm still on the first side of the factory set after doing
about a hundred board feet of relatively hard woods like white oak,
coffeetree, walnut and canarywood. If I can do another 300 bf before I
replace the knives, it will be about 12¢/bf, which is acceptable to me.
I think it is a good machine and I'd buy it again.
Bill Davis Jr says...
> I have not used it yet as I am still working on getting my small
> workshop setup. With the limited space I have, what is a good rolling
> cart/bench? Or would it be better to build something myself?
I made a table from 2x2 poplar, 3/8" plywood and cheap latex paint. $15
for materials, but no wheels. I made a variety of them for storage
bins, scroll saw stand, router table etc. They look pretty cool and
with mortise and tenon joints they are nice and solid.
"Upscale" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>
> What mechanism are you using for focal points to flip the entire table
> one. Steel rod?
Iron pipe.
Standard, threaded, iron pipe from the plumbing department at Lowes.
> Nuts and Bolts? Any wear at those points?
Only been about a year - but nope, none that I can see.
> Planer and Mitre saw together will add up to quite a bit of weight.
Yeah. My CMS is pretty light, but the DW735 is almost a hunnert' pounds.
Hence I double walled (from 3/4" ply) some things.
> I'd expect the planer to outweigh the mitre saw. Any great difficulty
> (muscle power needed) spinning the planer back up when it's upside
> down?
No. You do *notice* the weight differential, but you can do it one-
handed, if your so inclined. I spent a little time positioning both on
the top to try to get their mass centers as close to the rod as possible.
But it was just by eyeball and horribly unscientific. Prolly' missed by
a mile.
What I really screwed up on was the cheap casters. Life's too short for
cheap clamps, cheap casters and cheap "xxxx"... :)
Bill Davis Jr <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
>
>
> I would like to get some kind of table or bench with wheels as to the
> limited amount of space I have.
I built a flip top for mine:
http://66.1.238.45:8118/My_Homepage_Export/My_Homepage_Files/Page6.html
I'll echo everything Doug Miller says - I've had mine for over a year now
and have zero complaints! Also, I haven't seen any reason to buy the
folding extenstion tables.
arw01 <[email protected]> wrote:
>I planned down some 14" Alder to 1/4" the other night a bit at a time,
>no problems with feeding.
That's 13-3/4" worth of chips! Wouldn't it have made more sense to
resaw it?
Just wanted to say thanks for re-affirming my purchase of the DW735.
I purchased one about a month ago from a local HD. Since it was the
first time I opened an account with them I got 10% off plus 12 months
of no interest.
I have not used it yet as I am still working on getting my small
workshop setup. With the limited space I have, what is a good rolling
cart/bench? Or would it be better to build something myself?
With that, if anyone reads this, what is a good dust collection for a
small one car garage setup? Size of garage is about 9' x 12'+ feet.
Thanks,
Bill
"Bill Davis Jr" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>
> Just wanted to say thanks for re-affirming my purchase of the DW735.
> With that, if anyone reads this, what is a good dust collection for a
> small one car garage setup? Size of garage is about 9' x 12'+ feet.
>
I use a Griz G8027 1HP DC in my one-car space. It works but I do wish I had
invested in the next size up - something like their G1029Z or a Jet 1100.
On Thu, 23 Jun 2005 00:28:36 -0500, Hax Planx
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Bill Davis Jr says...
>
>> I have not used it yet as I am still working on getting my small
>> workshop setup. With the limited space I have, what is a good rolling
>> cart/bench? Or would it be better to build something myself?
>
>I made a table from 2x2 poplar, 3/8" plywood and cheap latex paint. $15
>for materials, but no wheels. I made a variety of them for storage
>bins, scroll saw stand, router table etc. They look pretty cool and
>with mortise and tenon joints they are nice and solid.
I would like to get some kind of table or bench with wheels as to the
limited amount of space I have.
First I will look at what is available locally. Then if I can not find
anything I will build my own.
Thanks again,
Bill