I have tasted the forbidden fruit of the electro-jointer, and I sort of like
it. I have a Delta JT-160 benchtop deal, which I thought would be better
than nothing. It sort of is. Sort of. It has given me a taste of what
mechanical precision can do that hand planes in my fumbly and unskilled
fingers cannot, but it's a slightly bitter taste. (I love'em, but they're
definitely not precision tools in my hands I'm afraid.)
I've just about convinced myself to ditch this thing and buy a real jointer.
Something with:
* cast iron tables
* a real fence
* tables long enough to joint a 4' board without sniping the hell out of it
The benchtop does OK with boards up to maybe 2' long, which is useful, but
not quite useful enough. I've barely used it, and I'd like to box it back
up in all the original packaging and find a nice new home for it. Surely
someone out there would love to have a nice almost new Delta JT-160. :)
Then I'll turn around and buy either the Grizz or the bigger Delta.
I'm looking spec for spec, trying to figure which one is better worth
looking at. Price for price, they're similar enough that it doesn't much
matter. The Delta is available cash and carry, while the Grizz is mail
order. The Grizz has handwheels, the Delta doesn't. The Delta has a 4"
dust port, the Grizz doesn't.
I don't have a DC, and don't have room for a DC. There's no way my shop vac
trash can deal could keep up, so I suppose I have little practical
alternative but to continue ejecting the chips onto the floor. That gives
my daughter something to do anyway. She likes to sweep my shop, and no,
that's not mandatory gender role enforcement on my part. She just likes to
sweep. Who am I to argue with that?
So, the dust port on the Delta is not really a bonus. The Grizz has
handwheels, which look cool. I'm not quite sure how the mechanism works on
the Delta, but I notice that even their big daddy 12" job has some kind of
lever flummy instead of handwheels. Looks like you loosen a nut and then
use the lever to adjust the height. Looks a bit crude, judging from
pictures. I'll have to go play with the display at Lowe's and check that
aspect out.
Well, anyway, what else should I be thinking about here? I'm generally
inclined more toward cash and carry than mail order, so that puts it at
least 60% that I would grab the Delta. If the Grizz has a lot more to
offer in the way of useful features or enhancements, however, I could be
swayed to go that route. I reckon I could look at JET and stuff too.
(And yes, for those who will point this out, I realize I have umpty
buttloads of medical bills coming in any day now. Thanks for reminding me,
and it doesn't hurt to shop, dammit.)
While I'm at it, there's no place I can leave one of these beasts stationary
in my bitty shop. I need to think about mobile bases that can move a
~250-pound cast iron behemoth around on a floor composed of irregular,
sagging, warped sections of plywood. No two segments are the same height,
and they all have some degree of flex. I might well break through some of
them and have to think about redoing the floor, come to think of it. Pity
the benchtop just didn't have enough fundamental jointeriness about it to
do what I need to do with it.
--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/
Do yourself a favor and look carefully at the Yorkcraft 6" jointer. It
is exactly the same as the Delta 37-195, and I mean exactly! If you
call Yorkcraft they will tell you so: it's made in the same factory,
and used to be shipped with the same manual with the "Delta" crossed
out. (at least legend on the post-sites indicate as much). I did my
research before buying the Yorkcraft and am extremely happy with it and
saved a lot of money. The Yorkcraft sells for $339.
http://store.wilkemachinery.com/default.tpl?action=full&cart=1106529270256673&id1=7&--woSECTIONSdatarq=7&--SECTIONSword=ww&--eqskudatarq=2339
Here's the web adress (I don't know why it's not showing as a link).
Silvan wrote:
> I have tasted the forbidden fruit of the electro-jointer, and I sort
of like
> it. I have a Delta JT-160 benchtop deal, which I thought would be
better
> than nothing. It sort of is. Sort of. It has given me a taste of
what
> mechanical precision can do that hand planes in my fumbly and
unskilled
> fingers cannot, but it's a slightly bitter taste. (I love'em, but
they're
> definitely not precision tools in my hands I'm afraid.)
>
> I've just about convinced myself to ditch this thing and buy a real
jointer.
> Something with:
>
> * cast iron tables
> * a real fence
> * tables long enough to joint a 4' board without sniping the hell out
of it
>
> The benchtop does OK with boards up to maybe 2' long, which is
useful, but
> not quite useful enough. I've barely used it, and I'd like to box it
back
> up in all the original packaging and find a nice new home for it.
Surely
> someone out there would love to have a nice almost new Delta JT-160.
:)
> Then I'll turn around and buy either the Grizz or the bigger Delta.
>
> I'm looking spec for spec, trying to figure which one is better worth
> looking at. Price for price, they're similar enough that it doesn't
much
> matter. The Delta is available cash and carry, while the Grizz is
mail
> order. The Grizz has handwheels, the Delta doesn't. The Delta has a
4"
> dust port, the Grizz doesn't.
>
> I don't have a DC, and don't have room for a DC. There's no way my
shop vac
> trash can deal could keep up, so I suppose I have little practical
> alternative but to continue ejecting the chips onto the floor. That
gives
> my daughter something to do anyway. She likes to sweep my shop, and
no,
> that's not mandatory gender role enforcement on my part. She just
likes to
> sweep. Who am I to argue with that?
>
> So, the dust port on the Delta is not really a bonus. The Grizz has
> handwheels, which look cool. I'm not quite sure how the mechanism
works on
> the Delta, but I notice that even their big daddy 12" job has some
kind of
> lever flummy instead of handwheels. Looks like you loosen a nut and
then
> use the lever to adjust the height. Looks a bit crude, judging from
> pictures. I'll have to go play with the display at Lowe's and check
that
> aspect out.
>
> Well, anyway, what else should I be thinking about here? I'm
generally
> inclined more toward cash and carry than mail order, so that puts it
at
> least 60% that I would grab the Delta. If the Grizz has a lot more
to
> offer in the way of useful features or enhancements, however, I could
be
> swayed to go that route. I reckon I could look at JET and stuff too.
>
> (And yes, for those who will point this out, I realize I have umpty
> buttloads of medical bills coming in any day now. Thanks for
reminding me,
> and it doesn't hurt to shop, dammit.)
>
> While I'm at it, there's no place I can leave one of these beasts
stationary
> in my bitty shop. I need to think about mobile bases that can move a
> ~250-pound cast iron behemoth around on a floor composed of
irregular,
> sagging, warped sections of plywood. No two segments are the same
height,
> and they all have some degree of flex. I might well break through
some of
> them and have to think about redoing the floor, come to think of it.
Pity
> the benchtop just didn't have enough fundamental jointeriness about
it to
> do what I need to do with it.
>
> --
> Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
> Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
> http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
> http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/
Silvan wrote:
>
...
> Something with:
>
> * cast iron tables
> * a real fence
> * tables long enough to joint a 4' board without sniping the hell out of it
If the tables and knives are properly adjusted, you shouldn't get snipe
irrespective of how long or short the bed is...
See if you can find the FWW review of 6" jointers of not too long
ago...it was actually pretty well done, I think...
For the mobile base, a small jointer is light enough it doesn't need a
lot...I'm thinking you could take one of the cheapie ones and get some
extra wheels and make a longer axle to replace the single wheels at each
corner to provide a width of 2- or 3x the standard?
The lack of dust collection is not a big problem for jointers. They mostly
make chips, not much dust, and it pretty much all falls straight down. So a
box at the base keeps things nice and clean.
Matthew (who still uses a box after many years)
"Silvan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have tasted the forbidden fruit of the electro-jointer, and I sort of
>like
> it. I have a Delta JT-160 benchtop deal, which I thought would be better
> than nothing. It sort of is. Sort of. It has given me a taste of what
> mechanical precision can do that hand planes in my fumbly and unskilled
> fingers cannot, but it's a slightly bitter taste. (I love'em, but they're
> definitely not precision tools in my hands I'm afraid.)
>
> I've just about convinced myself to ditch this thing and buy a real
> jointer.
> Something with:
>
> * cast iron tables
> * a real fence
> * tables long enough to joint a 4' board without sniping the hell out of
> it
>
> The benchtop does OK with boards up to maybe 2' long, which is useful, but
> not quite useful enough. I've barely used it, and I'd like to box it back
> up in all the original packaging and find a nice new home for it. Surely
> someone out there would love to have a nice almost new Delta JT-160. :)
> Then I'll turn around and buy either the Grizz or the bigger Delta.
>
> I'm looking spec for spec, trying to figure which one is better worth
> looking at. Price for price, they're similar enough that it doesn't much
> matter. The Delta is available cash and carry, while the Grizz is mail
> order. The Grizz has handwheels, the Delta doesn't. The Delta has a 4"
> dust port, the Grizz doesn't.
>
> I don't have a DC, and don't have room for a DC. There's no way my shop
> vac
> trash can deal could keep up, so I suppose I have little practical
> alternative but to continue ejecting the chips onto the floor. That gives
> my daughter something to do anyway. She likes to sweep my shop, and no,
> that's not mandatory gender role enforcement on my part. She just likes
> to
> sweep. Who am I to argue with that?
>
> So, the dust port on the Delta is not really a bonus. The Grizz has
> handwheels, which look cool. I'm not quite sure how the mechanism works
> on
> the Delta, but I notice that even their big daddy 12" job has some kind of
> lever flummy instead of handwheels. Looks like you loosen a nut and then
> use the lever to adjust the height. Looks a bit crude, judging from
> pictures. I'll have to go play with the display at Lowe's and check that
> aspect out.
>
> Well, anyway, what else should I be thinking about here? I'm generally
> inclined more toward cash and carry than mail order, so that puts it at
> least 60% that I would grab the Delta. If the Grizz has a lot more to
> offer in the way of useful features or enhancements, however, I could be
> swayed to go that route. I reckon I could look at JET and stuff too.
>
> (And yes, for those who will point this out, I realize I have umpty
> buttloads of medical bills coming in any day now. Thanks for reminding
> me,
> and it doesn't hurt to shop, dammit.)
>
> While I'm at it, there's no place I can leave one of these beasts
> stationary
> in my bitty shop. I need to think about mobile bases that can move a
> ~250-pound cast iron behemoth around on a floor composed of irregular,
> sagging, warped sections of plywood. No two segments are the same height,
> and they all have some degree of flex. I might well break through some of
> them and have to think about redoing the floor, come to think of it. Pity
> the benchtop just didn't have enough fundamental jointeriness about it to
> do what I need to do with it.
>
> --
> Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
> Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
> http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
> http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/
"Silvan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have tasted the forbidden fruit of the electro-jointer, and I sort of
>like
> it. I have a Delta JT-160 benchtop deal, which I thought would be better
> than nothing. It sort of is. Sort of. It has given me a taste of what
> mechanical precision can do that hand planes in my fumbly and unskilled
> fingers cannot, but it's a slightly bitter taste. (I love'em, but they're
> definitely not precision tools in my hands I'm afraid.)
>
> I've just about convinced myself to ditch this thing and buy a real
> jointer.
> Something with:
>
I've looked at a couple of jointers myself & I just prefer the hand wheels
to the levers. When I still lived in Canada, a friend had a Busy Bee 6"
jointer and he simply ejected the shavings onto the floor. This was no
biggie as they just piled up and were easy to sweep. They don't blow all
over the place. I myself am now doing the big save up for either the new
Grizz 6" with the spiral cutterhead, or the Powermatic 54A. I just want to
do it once and do it right. I find myself frequently cheaping out and
kicking myself later. Anyway, back to your original ? I think I would tend
to go with the Griz for the handwheels. I haven't really heard any really
bad things on the Grizz products. OTOH the Delta will be local for the ease
of returning if needed and of course local service. There, I've managed to
type for about 5 minutes and basically come to no conclusion, and offer no
advice whatsoever. Maybe I should go into politics.
On another note, how is the Mrs. feeling? Getting better by the day I hope.
Cheers,
Paul