Tt

"Todd"

13/11/2004 1:24 AM

Woodmaster moulder/planer

Anyone have any opinion on this tool? Looking at the 18" model.

Thanks


This topic has 8 replies

dz

david zaret

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

13/11/2004 1:44 AM

todd,

i have the 18" model with propack and a bunch of molding knives. it's a
great machine. do a google search and you should find a bunch of recent
posts about it.

my only complaint - and it's not really something that i can blame
woodmaster for - is that when the drum sander is installed, you can't
sand very thin parts because it uses feeder rollers and not a belt. but
it's primarily a planer and molding cutter, so that's perfectly acceptable.

let me know if you have specific questions, i'm happy to answer.

--- dz


Todd wrote:
> Anyone have any opinion on this tool? Looking at the 18" model.
>
> Thanks
>
>

dz

david zaret

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

13/11/2004 2:27 AM

well, i don't know about the numbers, but you can cut trim in one pass.
the major time-sucker is the stock preparation - do you have something
that'll S4S the wood quickly? you'll spend far more time jointing and
planing than you will cutting the final profile...

do you have a good dust collector? this thing spits some serious chips.
i can fill a 55 gallon drum in an hour, easily.

-- dz


Todd wrote:
> Thanks David
>
> My Business partner and I looked at the machine today and will be ordering
> one on Monday(pro-pak, 18"). We have a cabinet/furniture shop as well as a
> 2000' kiln. This will make all our moldings and plus we hope to sell to
> local contractors as well. We hope to run $300 - $500 profit per month to
> pay the tool off. Is this possible with such a slow machine?
>
> Anyway, Thanks for the time.
>
> Todd
>
> "Todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>Anyone have any opinion on this tool? Looking at the 18" model.
>>
>>Thanks
>>
>>
>
>
>

dz

david zaret

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

14/11/2004 1:42 AM

larry,

yep, good idea. i will try it with a piece of ply and double-stick tape.

--- dz


Larry Kraus wrote:
> Can you work around this by using a sled to carry thin parts through?
> Maybe a piece of plywood with thin strips on the back and edge to keep
> the work piece in place?
>
> david zaret <news@__REMOVE__.zaret.com> wrote:
>
>
>>my only complaint - and it's not really something that i can blame
>>woodmaster for - is that when the drum sander is installed, you can't
>>sand very thin parts because it uses feeder rollers and not a belt. but
>>it's primarily a planer and molding cutter, so that's perfectly acceptable.
>
>

Jj

John

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

13/11/2004 10:40 AM

Have had one for about 18months, love it.

John

On Sat, 13 Nov 2004 01:24:54 GMT, "Todd"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Anyone have any opinion on this tool? Looking at the 18" model.
>
>Thanks
>

Tt

"Todd"

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

13/11/2004 2:55 AM

Yes we have dust collection, a 20" planer and a 8 " jointer.

Todd

"david zaret" <news@__REMOVE__.zaret.com> wrote in message
news:419570F4.4020105@__REMOVE__.zaret.com...
> well, i don't know about the numbers, but you can cut trim in one pass.
> the major time-sucker is the stock preparation - do you have something
> that'll S4S the wood quickly? you'll spend far more time jointing and
> planing than you will cutting the final profile...
>
> do you have a good dust collector? this thing spits some serious chips.
> i can fill a 55 gallon drum in an hour, easily.
>
> -- dz
>
>
> Todd wrote:
> > Thanks David
> >
> > My Business partner and I looked at the machine today and will be
ordering
> > one on Monday(pro-pak, 18"). We have a cabinet/furniture shop as well as
a
> > 2000' kiln. This will make all our moldings and plus we hope to sell to
> > local contractors as well. We hope to run $300 - $500 profit per month
to
> > pay the tool off. Is this possible with such a slow machine?
> >
> > Anyway, Thanks for the time.
> >
> > Todd
> >
> > "Todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >
> >>Anyone have any opinion on this tool? Looking at the 18" model.
> >>
> >>Thanks
> >>
> >>
> >
> >
> >

bB

[email protected] (Bill Wallace)

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

14/11/2004 5:44 PM

I have some questions about this as well.

First of all, I've spoken with these folks a few times and they seem
like a great company to work with. I plan on doing gang ripping as my
primary use. They really gave me some great input and were ready to
quote on customizing the machine and some cutter attachments for me.
Very encouraging.

My question is, has anyone done any gang ripping with this unit? I'm
just wondering how clean the cuts are and does it track well (ie cut
straight)?

The guys at woodmaster were ready to throw a 10hp motor in this baby
and create some custom spacers so I could rip as many 3/8" wide strips
at once as I'd like. They assured me with a 10hp I could easily rip a
12" wide board into 3/8" strips all at once no prob.

BW
P.S. They did give me a local reference of a customer but until I'm
ready to lay down cash I figured I'd just ask here.



"Todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Anyone have any opinion on this tool? Looking at the 18" model.
>
> Thanks

LK

Larry Kraus

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

13/11/2004 2:39 PM

Can you work around this by using a sled to carry thin parts through?
Maybe a piece of plywood with thin strips on the back and edge to keep
the work piece in place?

david zaret <news@__REMOVE__.zaret.com> wrote:

>my only complaint - and it's not really something that i can blame
>woodmaster for - is that when the drum sander is installed, you can't
>sand very thin parts because it uses feeder rollers and not a belt. but
>it's primarily a planer and molding cutter, so that's perfectly acceptable.

Tt

"Todd"

in reply to "Todd" on 13/11/2004 1:24 AM

13/11/2004 1:56 AM

Thanks David

My Business partner and I looked at the machine today and will be ordering
one on Monday(pro-pak, 18"). We have a cabinet/furniture shop as well as a
2000' kiln. This will make all our moldings and plus we hope to sell to
local contractors as well. We hope to run $300 - $500 profit per month to
pay the tool off. Is this possible with such a slow machine?

Anyway, Thanks for the time.

Todd

"Todd" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Anyone have any opinion on this tool? Looking at the 18" model.
>
> Thanks
>
>


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