On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 06:09:25 GMT, Groggy <[email protected]>
wrote:
>On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 00:16:34 -0500, Jay Pique <[email protected]>
>wrote:
>
>>It's been my experience that the set of blades that come with the
>>Dewalt 735 Planer chip easily and dull quickly.
>>
>>JP
>>***************
>>Benchbuilding.
>
>Jay, FWIW, my experience on the DW733 is the same, the metal seems to
>be susceptible to dulling and chipping. Much more so than my jointer
>blades.
>
>I am not sure if the blades on the 733 and 735 are the same though.
The 735 is a 3-blade design, with a "13 Inch" cutting width, as seen
in either link below...
http://tinyurl.com/6lldk
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/B0000CCXUB/ref=pd_sim_hi_3/103-0231328-4865441?v=glance&s=hi&n=228013
JP
On Fri, 31 Dec 2004 00:16:34 -0500, Jay Pique <[email protected]>
wrote:
>It's been my experience that the set of blades that come with the
>Dewalt 735 Planer chip easily and dull quickly.
>
>JP
>***************
>Benchbuilding.
Jay, FWIW, my experience on the DW733 is the same, the metal seems to
be susceptible to dulling and chipping. Much more so than my jointer
blades.
I am not sure if the blades on the 733 and 735 are the same though.
Greg
"Jay Pique" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
>I am not sure if the blades on the 733 and 735 are the same though.
>
> The 735 is a 3-blade design, with a "13 Inch" cutting width, as seen
> in either link below...
Mebbe he meant the 734 -- the kissin' cousin to the 735. But still not
13"...
I dunno - I'm only a weekend dorker but mt blades are holding up fine.
Lotsa' Oak, Maple and Mahogany have passed underneath.
I take real light cuts...