Leon replies:
<<I think the brand is relative new. In general I have heard that the
brand
is pretty good and unique. IIRC Sears sells a combination belt, disk,
spindle sander that is identical to the one that Palmgren makes, so it
too
is probably made by Palmgren.>>
Then the benchtop jointer is pretty good--I've got the Craftsman
version, and it is heavy, stable and cuts cleanly. Much more cast iron
than you'd expect in a benchtop tool.
Avraham responds:
>>I went to Sears and looked at the jointer there. Now I have to
ask - is the fit'n'finish normally pretty awful, or is this one a
beat-to-death floor model? In particular, the bottom of this
example's fence was so not straight that the infeed wouldn't rise up
to a 0 cut level. The infeed-end of the fence stuck down so much it
hit the bed, preventing it from rising. Is this typical<<
I'm inclined to doubt it is typical. It is certainly not the case with
mine.
"Avraham" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Anyone know anything about the Palmgren 82461 benchtop 6" jointer?
> The Amazon reviews are good, but it's Amazon, not rec.woodworking.
>
> TIA,
I think the brand is relative new. In general I have heard that the brand
is pretty good and unique. IIRC Sears sells a combination belt, disk,
spindle sander that is identical to the one that Palmgren makes, so it too
is probably made by Palmgren.
"Avraham" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> I checked with Palmgren and they do indeed make the Craftsman jointer,
> and they are identical. I'm not quite so thilled with the concept -
> my relatively recent (say, 10-5 years ago) experiences with Craftsman
> power tools leads me to believe the 'Crapsman' label they've gotten.
> Thanks,
> A
Educate yourself with Craftsman tools before writing them off. DeWalt and
Bosch make some of the Craftsman tools among other tool makers
On 7 Mar 2005 13:15:20 -0800, "Charlie Self" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Leon replies:
><<I think the brand is relative new. In general I have heard that the
>brand
>is pretty good and unique. IIRC Sears sells a combination belt, disk,
>spindle sander that is identical to the one that Palmgren makes, so it
>too
>is probably made by Palmgren.>>
>
>Then the benchtop jointer is pretty good--I've got the Craftsman
>version, and it is heavy, stable and cuts cleanly. Much more cast iron
>than you'd expect in a benchtop tool.
I checked with Palmgren and they do indeed make the Craftsman jointer,
and they are identical. I'm not quite so thilled with the concept -
my relatively recent (say, 10-5 years ago) experiences with Craftsman
power tools leads me to believe the 'Crapsman' label they've gotten.
Thanks,
A
"Avraham" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>>
>>Educate yourself with Craftsman tools before writing them off. DeWalt and
>>Bosch make some of the Craftsman tools among other tool makers
>>
> Have they gotten better lately? The Craftsman 4" jointer of a few
> years ago was best used as a paperweight - the in and out feed beds
> wouldn't stay parallel to each other for *any* adjustment of the cut
> depth. My Craftsman cordless drill was a weenie (replaced with an
> equal-voltage DeWalt that was 10 times better). My Craftsman miter
> saw won't cut consistent angles, even at the notched angles.. The
> list goes on and on.
>
> If they're better now, I'd be willing to try again.
You need to take a look at the model numbers to see whom makes the tool.
Many manufacturers make Craftsman tools.
On 7 Mar 2005 13:15:20 -0800, "Charlie Self" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Leon replies:
><<I think the brand is relative new. In general I have heard that the
>brand
>is pretty good and unique. IIRC Sears sells a combination belt, disk,
>spindle sander that is identical to the one that Palmgren makes, so it
>too
>is probably made by Palmgren.>>
>
>Then the benchtop jointer is pretty good--I've got the Craftsman
>version, and it is heavy, stable and cuts cleanly. Much more cast iron
>than you'd expect in a benchtop tool.
OK, I went to Sears and looked at the jointer there. Now I have to
ask - is the fit'n'finish normally pretty awful, or is this one a
beat-to-death floor model? In particular, the bottom of this
example's fence was so not straight that the infeed wouldn't rise up
to a 0 cut level. The infeed-end of the fence stuck down so much it
hit the bed, preventing it from rising. Is this typical?
Thanks,
A
On Wed, 09 Mar 2005 00:03:22 GMT, "Leon"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>"Avraham" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>>
>> I checked with Palmgren and they do indeed make the Craftsman jointer,
>> and they are identical. I'm not quite so thilled with the concept -
>> my relatively recent (say, 10-5 years ago) experiences with Craftsman
>> power tools leads me to believe the 'Crapsman' label they've gotten.
>> Thanks,
>> A
>
>Educate yourself with Craftsman tools before writing them off. DeWalt and
>Bosch make some of the Craftsman tools among other tool makers
>
Have they gotten better lately? The Craftsman 4" jointer of a few
years ago was best used as a paperweight - the in and out feed beds
wouldn't stay parallel to each other for *any* adjustment of the cut
depth. My Craftsman cordless drill was a weenie (replaced with an
equal-voltage DeWalt that was 10 times better). My Craftsman miter
saw won't cut consistent angles, even at the notched angles.. The
list goes on and on.
If they're better now, I'd be willing to try again.
Thanks,
A