Jb

"James"

14/01/2008 5:04 PM

DeWAlt 735 Planer Question & Hint

Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot be
sharpened can they? Here's the hint I was looking for a way to route
the chips to a garbage can (I'd been using a shopvac) and didn't want
to get involved with 4" dust fittings (pricey) so I started looking at
2" ABS fittings. I used a 2" long 90* elbow which almost slipped over
the 2 1/2" outlet. I warmed it up with a heat gun until it was soft and
forced it over the outlet. It's tight but won't blow or vibrate off but
can be removed. Then I added a short length of 2" ABS pipe, a 90*
street elbow, a male adapter thru the trash can lid and a female
adapter to act as a nut to hold it in place. Cost about $10. Jim
--


This topic has 13 replies

Jb

"James"

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

15/01/2008 6:07 PM

Jeff wrote:

> On Jan 14, 12:04 pm, "James" <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot
> > be sharpened can they? Here's the hint I was looking for a way to
> > route the chips to a garbage can (I'd been using a shopvac) and
> > didn't want to get involved with 4" dust fittings (pricey) so I
> > started looking at 2" ABS fittings. I used a 2" long 90* elbow
> > which almost slipped over the 2 1/2" outlet. I warmed it up with a
> > heat gun until it was soft and forced it over the outlet. It's
> > tight but won't blow or vibrate off but can be removed. Then I
> > added a short length of 2" ABS pipe, a 90* street elbow, a male
> > adapter thru the trash can lid and a female adapter to act as a nut
> > to hold it in place. Cost about $10. Jim
> > --
>
> Pictures?

Soon, Jim

--

Jb

"James"

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

15/01/2008 6:10 PM

Doug Miller wrote:

> In article <[email protected]>, "James"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot
> > be sharpened can they?
>
> Yes, they can, although "honed" might be a better word. There's not
> enough metal there to allow for heavy grinding, but they can be
> lightly ground. I use a Tormek grinder, with their planer-knife jig.
> The Tormek doesn't remove metal very fast, so it's easy to get a good
> edge without accidentally going too far. I've had my DW735 for over
> four years, and use it a lot -- but I'm still on the first set of
> knives (and the fourth resharpening). It appears that the fifth
> resharp will probably be the last one, and then I'll have to get new
> blades.

I run some really old hard oak thru mine and wore a dip in them so I
suspect that there isn't enough edge left. Jim

--

Jb

"James"

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

16/01/2008 4:38 PM

Twayne wrote:

> James <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot
> > be sharpened can they? Here's the hint I was looking for a way to
> > route the chips to a garbage can (I'd been using a shopvac) and
> > didn't want to get involved with 4" dust fittings (pricey) so I
> > started looking at 2" ABS fittings. I used a 2" long 90* elbow
> > which almost slipped over the 2 1/2" outlet. I warmed it up with a
> > heat gun until it was soft and forced it over the outlet. It's
> > tight but won't blow or vibrate off but can be removed. Then I
> > added a short length of 2" ABS pipe, a 90* street elbow, a male
> > adapter thru the trash can lid and a female adapter to act as a nut
> > to hold it in place. Cost about $10. Jim
>
> Do you really need vacuum? Mine's powerful enough the chips go thru
> my large vac hose right into the garbage can. The can's fastened to
> the planer carrier; moves around with it. it's also a DeWalt.

The blower is very powerful so that's why I eliminated the shopvac plus
I had enough noise without running the shopvac. Jim

--

Jb

"James"

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

22/01/2008 3:56 PM

Doug Miller wrote:

> In article <[email protected]>, "James"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > The blower is very powerful so that's why I eliminated the shopvac
> > plus I had enough noise without running the shopvac. Jim
>
> You mean you can hear your shopvac over the DW735? <g>

Only if I leave my hearing aids in. :>) Pictures will be coming soon.
I've still got a couple of bugs to work out. Jim

--

Tn

"Twayne"

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

15/01/2008 12:20 AM

James <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot be
> sharpened can they? Here's the hint I was looking for a way to route
> the chips to a garbage can (I'd been using a shopvac) and didn't want
> to get involved with 4" dust fittings (pricey) so I started looking at
> 2" ABS fittings. I used a 2" long 90* elbow which almost slipped over
> the 2 1/2" outlet. I warmed it up with a heat gun until it was soft
> and forced it over the outlet. It's tight but won't blow or vibrate
> off but can be removed. Then I added a short length of 2" ABS pipe, a
> 90* street elbow, a male adapter thru the trash can lid and a female
> adapter to act as a nut to hold it in place. Cost about $10. Jim

Do you really need vacuum? Mine's powerful enough the chips go thru my
large vac hose right into the garbage can. The can's fastened to the
planer carrier; moves around with it. it's also a DeWalt.

tv

"toolman946 via CraftKB.com"

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

16/01/2008 3:45 AM

When the blades are "done" for the planer... make up a handle and they can be
ground into really good marking knives! (Shorten the blades first, though...)

--
Message posted via CraftKB.com
http://www.craftkb.com/Uwe/Forums.aspx/woodworking/200801/1

Bb

BDBConstruction

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

22/01/2008 2:09 PM

On Jan 22, 10:56=A0am, "James" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Doug Miller wrote:
> > In article <[email protected]>, "James"
> > <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > The blower is very powerful so that's why I eliminated the shopvac
> > > plus I had enough noise without running the shopvac. Jim
>
> > You mean you can hear your shopvac over the DW735? <g>
>
> Only if I leave my hearing aids in. :>) Pictures will be coming soon.
> I've still got a couple of bugs to work out. Jim
>
> --

I am sure you have probably all seen this but just in case:
http://www.amazon.com/DEWALT-DW7353-Collection-Accessory-Planer/dp/B0000CCXU=
C

We have a 735 that we take on jobs with us and I picked one of the
above up for 20.00 at a local tool surplus it works really well. The
worst part is if you have any quantity of material you had better have
4-6 trash cans or a place to dump them. I have always been very
impressed with the chip removal of the 735. We actually surfaced about
1200bf of chestnut oak on a job once and if you got behind the planer
the chips would actually hurt.

Mark

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

15/01/2008 6:45 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "James" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Doug Miller wrote:
>
>> In article <[email protected]>, "James"
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot
>> > be sharpened can they?
>>
>> Yes, they can, although "honed" might be a better word. There's not
>> enough metal there to allow for heavy grinding, but they can be
>> lightly ground. I use a Tormek grinder, with their planer-knife jig.
>> The Tormek doesn't remove metal very fast, so it's easy to get a good
>> edge without accidentally going too far. I've had my DW735 for over
>> four years, and use it a lot -- but I'm still on the first set of
>> knives (and the fourth resharpening). It appears that the fifth
>> resharp will probably be the last one, and then I'll have to get new
>> blades.
>
>I run some really old hard oak thru mine and wore a dip in them so I
>suspect that there isn't enough edge left. Jim
>
Depends on how much of a dip. According to DeWalt technical support, the
discard dimension is 7/8" (0.875") width. In my experience, you can get away
with going even smaller, but not by much (maybe another 0.010).

Also, to avoid that problem in the future, vary the position of the boards
when you feed them through so you're not wearing the same section of the blade
every time -- or skew them diagonally so that the entire blade is used on
every pass.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

16/01/2008 2:30 PM

In article <7e46c79637292@uwe>, "toolman946 via CraftKB.com" <u40139@uwe> wrote:
>When the blades are "done" for the planer... make up a handle and they can be
>ground into really good marking knives! (Shorten the blades first, though...)
>
That's a great idea. I think I'll steal that.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

14/01/2008 7:49 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "James" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot be
>sharpened can they?

Yes, they can, although "honed" might be a better word. There's not enough
metal there to allow for heavy grinding, but they can be lightly ground. I use
a Tormek grinder, with their planer-knife jig. The Tormek doesn't remove metal
very fast, so it's easy to get a good edge without accidentally going too far.
I've had my DW735 for over four years, and use it a *lot* -- but I'm still on
the first set of knives (and the fourth resharpening). It appears that the
fifth resharp will probably be the last one, and then I'll have to get new
blades.

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.

Jj

Jeff

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

14/01/2008 9:21 AM

On Jan 14, 12:04 pm, "James" <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hi Group, I just flipped the blades in my 735 planner. These cannot be
> sharpened can they? Here's the hint I was looking for a way to route
> the chips to a garbage can (I'd been using a shopvac) and didn't want
> to get involved with 4" dust fittings (pricey) so I started looking at
> 2" ABS fittings. I used a 2" long 90* elbow which almost slipped over
> the 2 1/2" outlet. I warmed it up with a heat gun until it was soft and
> forced it over the outlet. It's tight but won't blow or vibrate off but
> can be removed. Then I added a short length of 2" ABS pipe, a 90*
> street elbow, a male adapter thru the trash can lid and a female
> adapter to act as a nut to hold it in place. Cost about $10. Jim
> --

Pictures?

RS

"Rick Samuel"

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

15/01/2008 6:21 AM

>
> Do you really need vacuum? Mine's powerful enough the chips go thru my
> large vac hose right into the garbage can. The can's fastened to the
> planer carrier; moves around with it. it's also a DeWalt.

I just got through putting my stand together for my 735, upgrade from Ryobi
A10. (still going strong, but snipe was becomming a problem)

Have a picture ro two of your garbage can set-up?

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "James" on 14/01/2008 5:04 PM

16/01/2008 6:57 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "James" <[email protected]> wrote:

>The blower is very powerful so that's why I eliminated the shopvac plus
>I had enough noise without running the shopvac. Jim

You mean you can hear your shopvac over the DW735? <g>



--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.


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