I finally have to give up my Bench Dog router table as a jointer. I waste
TOO much time and wood.
I am looking at Delta - Floor and Bench top. I do lots of small trays,
boxes, and some furniture like cabinets. I try to stay away from working
with LONG pieces of wood preferring to make things in detachable sections
for the larger pieces so the wood length capabilities may not apply.
What are your reco's.
Delta JT 360
Delta JT 160
Delta 37-195
Delta 37-275 Pro
I would prefer to have it on separate moveable stand regardless of the
model.
Thanks in advance.
Bill
"Bill Bradley" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I>
> Delta JT 360
> Delta JT 160
> Delta 37-195
> Delta 37-275 Pro
>
> I would prefer to have it on separate moveable stand regardless of the
> model.
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> Bill
>
>
When I bought my jointer I was not impressed with any of Delta's 6"
machines. I bought a Jet 6" closed stand jointer and love it.
Greg
I have a JT160, and I guess I come inbetween the other two opinions.
The tables are too short for serious work, and the aluminum wears poorly. I
have one simply because I don't have room for a proper jointer; and I guess
I am happy with it given what it is, but would dearly like more room and a
proper jointer.
On Tue, 25 May 2004 07:37:42 GMT, "Mike Richardson"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Similar thread - different DUMB question....(reflection on me not OP)
>
>
>My new jointer is covered in grease over the knives, and head assembly...
>
>I know how (thanks to wreckers) to remove the cosmolene from the table etc,
>and I will not be removing the grease form the posts, but, umm, should I
>remove the grease from the knife assembly area?
>
Yes, but remove the blades first. I learned this the hard way. Ouch!
Similar thread - different DUMB question....(reflection on me not OP)
My new jointer is covered in grease over the knives, and head assembly...
I know how (thanks to wreckers) to remove the cosmolene from the table etc,
and I will not be removing the grease form the posts, but, umm, should I
remove the grease from the knife assembly area?
Ty in advance...
Mike
"Edwin Pawlowski" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "J. Clarke" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > FWIW, I've got the 160 and for me so far it's working fine. Just did
some
> > 48" pieces for a workbench and they fit together so well that I can't
see
> > where they join except by the grain-change.
> >
> > For what you're describing it seems like an excellent fit.
>
> Maybe you have above average skills for it. See above thread "Help for
> Jointer" for another couple of opinions.
>
>
Bill Bradley wrote:
> I finally have to give up my Bench Dog router table as a jointer. I waste
> TOO much time and wood.
>
> I am looking at Delta - Floor and Bench top. I do lots of small trays,
> boxes, and some furniture like cabinets. I try to stay away from working
> with LONG pieces of wood preferring to make things in detachable sections
> for the larger pieces so the wood length capabilities may not apply.
>
> What are your reco's.
>
> Delta JT 360
> Delta JT 160
> Delta 37-195
> Delta 37-275 Pro
>
> I would prefer to have it on separate moveable stand regardless of the
> model.
>
> Thanks in advance.
FWIW, I've got the 160 and for me so far it's working fine. Just did some
48" pieces for a workbench and they fit together so well that I can't see
where they join except by the grain-change.
On pine it tends to clog up with shavings--if you're doing mostly softwoods
I suspect you may need to hook up a shop vacuum or dust collector to it to
keep it clear.
Cuts lignum vitae just fine (taking a thin cut--I haven't tried a heavy one)
and that's about as hard as it gets. Shavings run right out with that.
Haven't had it long enough to be able to judge how well it will hold up.
For what you're describing it seems like an excellent fit.
There's no stand for it, but it's small and light enough that you can keep
it on a shelf and pull it out when you need it if you don't want to buy or
make one.
So far I've used it a _lot_ more than I expected--it's a case of "once it's
there you use it"--if I had known that I was going to use it so much I'd
likely have gone for the JT360, but I doubt that I'd have gone above that
for my use.
> Bill
--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
Edwin Pawlowski wrote:
>
> "J. Clarke" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>> FWIW, I've got the 160 and for me so far it's working fine. Just did
>> some 48" pieces for a workbench and they fit together so well that I
>> can't see where they join except by the grain-change.
>>
>> For what you're describing it seems like an excellent fit.
>
> Maybe you have above average skills for it. See above thread "Help for
> Jointer" for another couple of opinions.
Or it may be that I've just not been working with stock longer than it can
handle--the OP indicated that he preferred to work with shorter pieces.
--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)
"J. Clarke" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> FWIW, I've got the 160 and for me so far it's working fine. Just did some
> 48" pieces for a workbench and they fit together so well that I can't see
> where they join except by the grain-change.
>
> For what you're describing it seems like an excellent fit.
Maybe you have above average skills for it. See above thread "Help for
Jointer" for another couple of opinions.
"Bill Bradley" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> I am looking at Delta - Floor and Bench top.
> Delta JT 160
Eliminate this one. As for the quality of the finished edge, the others are
probably not much different. The benchtop is going to frustrate you for even
medium length pieces compared to a floor model. IMO, it is not much of a
step up from using the router table.
Ed