jJ

[email protected] (Jay Stalman)

25/04/2004 7:20 PM

Performax vs Delta wide drum sanders

I have been considering purchasing a wide drum sander for use in a
home shop, for resawn veneer or highly figured panels which might chip
out in a planer. ANy recommendations on the pros and cons of these
(or other) models?
I was looking at the Performax 16-32 or comparable size units which
are about $800. Thanks.
Jay


This topic has 4 replies

JJ

JGS

in reply to [email protected] (Jay Stalman) on 25/04/2004 7:20 PM

26/04/2004 6:15 AM

Hi Jay,
If you DAGS in the following you will see a lot of good info. Both
machines are ok but they are not thickness sanders and from the posts I
think you will see the Performax pulled ahead for a while but the new
motor has caused some problems. Once I came to accept how little these
machines take off per pass I began appreciate my Delta. Cheers, JG

http://groups.google.ca/groups?hl=en&lr=&ie=UTF-8&group=rec.woodworking

Jay Stalman wrote:

> I have been considering purchasing a wide drum sander for use in a
> home shop, for resawn veneer or highly figured panels which might chip
> out in a planer. ANy recommendations on the pros and cons of these
> (or other) models?
> I was looking at the Performax 16-32 or comparable size units which
> are about $800. Thanks.
> Jay

Td

"TeamCasa"

in reply to [email protected] (Jay Stalman) on 25/04/2004 7:20 PM

25/04/2004 9:24 PM

I have the Performax, It's a great tool.

Dave

"Jay Stalman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have been considering purchasing a wide drum sander for use in a
> home shop, for resawn veneer or highly figured panels which might chip
> out in a planer. ANy recommendations on the pros and cons of these
> (or other) models?
> I was looking at the Performax 16-32 or comparable size units which
> are about $800. Thanks.
> Jay




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Lr

"Leon"

in reply to [email protected] (Jay Stalman) on 25/04/2004 7:20 PM

26/04/2004 2:07 PM

The biggest draw back to the Delta is that the table lifts for thickness
adjustment. This becomes a problem if you use infeed or out feed supports
for your wood. You will have to adjust the supports with each thickness
adjustment.

"Jay Stalman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have been considering purchasing a wide drum sander for use in a
> home shop, for resawn veneer or highly figured panels which might chip
> out in a planer. ANy recommendations on the pros and cons of these
> (or other) models?
> I was looking at the Performax 16-32 or comparable size units which
> are about $800. Thanks.
> Jay

MG

"Mike G"

in reply to [email protected] (Jay Stalman) on 25/04/2004 7:20 PM

26/04/2004 11:10 AM

Had to make the decision myself a couple of years ago and chose the Delta.

As near as I could tell then, and have found no reason to say things have
changed, both machines perform their basic functions quite well.

I chose the Delta over the Performex because I consider the fixed drum head
design more stable, liked the versatility of the two speeds and, there is
the ability to add a 4" pneumatic drum on the machine. It is an amazingly
handing little option.

So, without taking anything away from the Performax, I've have no regrets
about the decision.

--
Mike G.
[email protected]
Heirloom Woods
www.heirloom-woods.net
"Jay Stalman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have been considering purchasing a wide drum sander for use in a
> home shop, for resawn veneer or highly figured panels which might chip
> out in a planer. ANy recommendations on the pros and cons of these
> (or other) models?
> I was looking at the Performax 16-32 or comparable size units which
> are about $800. Thanks.
> Jay


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