I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks on
the cutting edges.
The good news is that the Woodcraft customer support was great and they sent
me a replacement set no questions asked along with a return postage label
for the defective set. Hopefully the new set will be defect free.
Eric
I have purchased several of these (individually) and used them all with no
problems or complaints. Performance similar to to Freud or CMT at a
fraction of the cost.
"Eric Yancey" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:%[email protected]...
> I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
> Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
> significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks
on
> the cutting edges.
>
> The good news is that the Woodcraft customer support was great and they
sent
> me a replacement set no questions asked along with a return postage label
> for the defective set. Hopefully the new set will be defect free.
>
> Eric
>
>
In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Mike Iglesias) wrote:
>In article <%[email protected]>,
>Eric Yancey <[email protected]> wrote:
>>I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
>>Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
>>significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks on
>>the cutting edges.
>
>I bought the bits they had on sale last month for $5 each. In
>checking them over today (after reading your post) two of the bits
>have chipped cutters. The rabbet bit had one cutter with a rough
>edge, and the flush trim bit has a nick in it.
Doesn't surprise me -- they're not the same bits as the ones that come in the
hardshell cases. Stock numbers are different, and so is the source. The bits
in the hardshell cases are made in Taiwan. The five-dollar bits in the vinyl
pouches are made in Communist China.
The bits that weren't defective look good. I can't wait to use them - good
finish, cutting edges feel sharp, etc.
My main reason for posting was to let folks know that there may be a problem
with the bit sets, but that the woodcraft customer service is making it
right!
Eric
"Rick & Julie" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:8y%[email protected]...
> I have purchased several of these (individually) and used them all with no
> problems or complaints. Performance similar to to Freud or CMT at a
> fraction of the cost.
>
>
> "Eric Yancey" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:%[email protected]...
> > I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
> > Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
> > significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks
> on
> > the cutting edges.
> >
> > The good news is that the Woodcraft customer support was great and they
> sent
> > me a replacement set no questions asked along with a return postage
label
> > for the defective set. Hopefully the new set will be defect free.
> >
> > Eric
> >
> >
>
>
"Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message > >
>
> IAE, two of the bits were defective - the 7/8" cove bit had a small
> chip out of it, and the 1-1/16" roman ogee had a very slight chip out
> of the corner.
I bought them also. I've only used one so far, the 3/8" core box bit. It
is still going strong after 450' of maple.
I have the same bit from Whiteside. Theirs is better, deeper, but cost 6x.
Ed
On Sun, 09 Nov 2003 13:55:56 GMT, [email protected] (Doug Miller)
wrote:
>In article <[email protected]>, [email protected] (Mike Iglesias) wrote:
>>In article <%[email protected]>,
>>Eric Yancey <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
>>>Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
>>>significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks on
>>>the cutting edges.
>>
>>I bought the bits they had on sale last month for $5 each. In
>>checking them over today (after reading your post) two of the bits
>>have chipped cutters. The rabbet bit had one cutter with a rough
>>edge, and the flush trim bit has a nick in it.
>
>Doesn't surprise me -- they're not the same bits as the ones that come in the
>hardshell cases. Stock numbers are different, and so is the source. The bits
>in the hardshell cases are made in Taiwan. The five-dollar bits in the vinyl
>pouches are made in Communist China.
As opposed to non-Communist China?
Have a nice week...
Trent
Fighting for peace is like screwing for virginity!
Dave Hall writes:
>
>Yeah! Although for some odd reason since the '70's we've been calling
>non-communist China Tiawan. I never understood why though.
Probably because they got tired of the name Formosa.
Charlie Self
"Criticism may not be agreeable, but it is necessary. It fulfils the same
function as pain in the human body. It calls attention to an unhealthy state of
things." Sir Winston Churchill
>>Yeah! Although for some odd reason since the '70's we've been calling
>>non-communist China Tiawan. I never understood why though.
>
>Probably because they got tired of the name Formosa.
>
>Charlie Self
Now Charlie, you know that Tiawan or Formosa was officially "China" to the US
Gov't from the time the Reds took over the mainland until Tricky Dick sold them
out. That's what I've never understood.
Dave Hall
Dave Hall notes:
>Now Charlie, you know that Tiawan or Formosa was officially "China" to the US
>Gov't from the time the Reds took over the mainland until Tricky Dick sold
>them
>out. That's what I've never understood.
>
It's easy, Dave. I think it was ol' Silent Cal who is reputed to have said,
"The business of American is business." Or maybe it was Hoobert Heever. Anyway,
pointing a politician at a billion person market just obliterated every other
consideration. What Tricky Dicky, and many others, never figured on was that
market doing the producing for itself...and most of the rest of the world.
Charlie Self
"Criticism may not be agreeable, but it is necessary. It fulfils the same
function as pain in the human body. It calls attention to an unhealthy state of
things." Sir Winston Churchill
In article <%[email protected]>,
Eric Yancey <[email protected]> wrote:
>I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
>Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
>significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks on
>the cutting edges.
I bought the bits they had on sale last month for $5 each. In
checking them over today (after reading your post) two of the bits
have chipped cutters. The rabbet bit had one cutter with a rough
edge, and the flush trim bit has a nick in it.
>The good news is that the Woodcraft customer support was great and they sent
>me a replacement set no questions asked along with a return postage label
>for the defective set. Hopefully the new set will be defect free.
I'll be calling them next week about the defective bits.
--
Mike Iglesias Email: [email protected]
University of California, Irvine phone: 949-824-6926
Network & Academic Computing Services FAX: 949-824-2069
On 9 Nov 2003 08:03:32 GMT, [email protected] (Mike Iglesias)
wrote:
>In article <%[email protected]>,
>Eric Yancey <[email protected]> wrote:
>>I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
>>Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
>>significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks on
>>the cutting edges.
>
>I bought the bits they had on sale last month for $5 each. In
>checking them over today (after reading your post) two of the bits
>have chipped cutters. The rabbet bit had one cutter with a rough
>edge, and the flush trim bit has a nick in it.
>
>>The good news is that the Woodcraft customer support was great and they sent
>>me a replacement set no questions asked along with a return postage label
>>for the defective set. Hopefully the new set will be defect free.
>
>I'll be calling them next week about the defective bits.
I purchased the same set at $39 (in addition to a Dustfoe 88 - which I
absolutely think is the best mask I've ever used). The set arrived in
a decent wooden box, with a plastic insert to hold them that will
probably be destroyed over time - but what do you want at 4 bucks a
bit.
IAE, two of the bits were defective - the 7/8" cove bit had a small
chip out of it, and the 1-1/16" roman ogee had a very slight chip out
of the corner. I'm no expert, but I'd guess that these tiny
imperfections wouldn't *significantly* impact performance (or would
they?), but I called Woodcraft anyways. The woman I spoke with was
excellent, and said they'd be sending me out replacement bits
immediately. All other bits are perfect.
Great service from Woodcraft, IMO and I'll buy from them again.
JP
Finally got around to using two of my Woodcraft bits from this same set last
night. Both the 1/2" and 1/4" routed nice clean slots into hard maple for
me with minimal burning. (The burning was mainly on entry as I was drop
cutting) No complaints here. My package of 10 didn't have any defective
bits either.
FWIW.
Brian.
"Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On 9 Nov 2003 08:03:32 GMT, [email protected] (Mike Iglesias)
> wrote:
>
> >In article <%[email protected]>,
> >Eric Yancey <[email protected]> wrote:
> >>I just received the 10 bit set from woodcraft that is on sale for $39.
> >>Unfortunately 3 of the bits were defective. The 1/4" straight cut had a
> >>significant chip on one of the flutes and two other bits had small nicks
on
> >>the cutting edges.
> >
> >I bought the bits they had on sale last month for $5 each. In
> >checking them over today (after reading your post) two of the bits
> >have chipped cutters. The rabbet bit had one cutter with a rough
> >edge, and the flush trim bit has a nick in it.
> >
> >>The good news is that the Woodcraft customer support was great and they
sent
> >>me a replacement set no questions asked along with a return postage
label
> >>for the defective set. Hopefully the new set will be defect free.
> >
> >I'll be calling them next week about the defective bits.
>
> I purchased the same set at $39 (in addition to a Dustfoe 88 - which I
> absolutely think is the best mask I've ever used). The set arrived in
> a decent wooden box, with a plastic insert to hold them that will
> probably be destroyed over time - but what do you want at 4 bucks a
> bit.
>
> IAE, two of the bits were defective - the 7/8" cove bit had a small
> chip out of it, and the 1-1/16" roman ogee had a very slight chip out
> of the corner. I'm no expert, but I'd guess that these tiny
> imperfections wouldn't *significantly* impact performance (or would
> they?), but I called Woodcraft anyways. The woman I spoke with was
> excellent, and said they'd be sending me out replacement bits
> immediately. All other bits are perfect.
>
> Great service from Woodcraft, IMO and I'll buy from them again.
>
> JP