I saw this at the IWF '04 and thought it was pretty neat. However, at
$489 I think I'd save up for a drum sander. It's such a simple
machine that I wonder if they wouldn't be better off pricing it in the
$250 range. For cleaning up smaller cabinet, drawer and door parts it
looks to me like a very quick and clean operation.
Anyone out there used one of these? I tried it at the show and
thought it was great - but too expensive.
JP
The unit you are referring to is a Sand-Flee. The seller of this unit is
R.J.R. Studios located in Robbinsville, NJ. Bob Raffo was probably the
demonstrator. Their email address is [email protected] Phone is
609-448-2414. I bought one of these units at the LIWW show last year. I
would classify it as a light duty drum sander. Have found that for
thickness sanding my Performaxx units are far superior. Nice feature of
Sand-Flee is that you can put up to 3 grits of paper on the drum at the same
time (hook & loop) for sanding of small parts. Most of the dust is
contained within the unit. Don't know of a website for the product.
If you are trying to end up with the same thickness of small parts, the new
benchtop Performaxx unit is in the same price range and would do a better
job IMHO.
Dave
"Brikp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> URL? Company Name? Google didn't find anything Sand Flea releated to
> woodworking.
>
> "Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > I saw this at the IWF '04 and thought it was pretty neat. However, at
> > $489 I think I'd save up for a drum sander. It's such a simple
> > machine that I wonder if they wouldn't be better off pricing it in the
> > $250 range. For cleaning up smaller cabinet, drawer and door parts it
> > looks to me like a very quick and clean operation.
> >
> > Anyone out there used one of these? I tried it at the show and
> > thought it was great - but too expensive.
> >
> > JP
>
>
URL? Company Name? Google didn't find anything Sand Flea releated to
woodworking.
"Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I saw this at the IWF '04 and thought it was pretty neat. However, at
> $489 I think I'd save up for a drum sander. It's such a simple
> machine that I wonder if they wouldn't be better off pricing it in the
> $250 range. For cleaning up smaller cabinet, drawer and door parts it
> looks to me like a very quick and clean operation.
>
> Anyone out there used one of these? I tried it at the show and
> thought it was great - but too expensive.
>
> JP
Hmmm, I thought you were talking about a certain group of people in your
subject line.
Jay Pique wrote:
> I saw this at the IWF '04 and thought it was pretty neat. However, at
> $489 I think I'd save up for a drum sander. It's such a simple
> machine that I wonder if they wouldn't be better off pricing it in the
> $250 range. For cleaning up smaller cabinet, drawer and door parts it
> looks to me like a very quick and clean operation.
>
> Anyone out there used one of these? I tried it at the show and
> thought it was great - but too expensive.
>
> JP
On Sat, 04 Sep 2004 12:19:32 -0600, Grandpa <jsdebooATcomcast.net>
wrote:
>Hmmm, I thought you were talking about a certain group of people in your
>subject line.
Yeah, the name definitely leaves something to be desired. "Sand Flea"
sounds cheap to me. Were it my product I'd definitely rename it.
JP
>Jay Pique wrote:
>
>> I saw this at the IWF '04 and thought it was pretty neat. However, at
>> $489 I think I'd save up for a drum sander. It's such a simple
>> machine that I wonder if they wouldn't be better off pricing it in the
>> $250 range. For cleaning up smaller cabinet, drawer and door parts it
>> looks to me like a very quick and clean operation.
>>
>> Anyone out there used one of these? I tried it at the show and
>> thought it was great - but too expensive.
>>
>> JP