19 replies so far
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#1 posted 381 days ago |
Hi Charlie! Congratulations on your new tool. I don’t have one exactly like that…a bigger heavier duty one. But use tips are nearly universal. -- Dan Krager, Olney IL http://www.kragerwoodworking.weebly.com |
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#2 posted 381 days ago |
Hi Charlie, that’s a great planer I have owned my for a little of 2 years. Here is the advice I can give you based on my experience. Other than that have fun, the blades are two sided so if the get dull just flip them around. I have had to do that after about my 25th pallet. There is a place online that sells the 3 pack of blades for $37, better tha everyone else selling it for $60 and up. I will PM that to you as well when I remember who it is. -- Martin ....always count the number of fingers you have before, and after using the saw. |
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#3 posted 381 days ago |
Since no one has brought up snipe, I’ll break the ice. I have a DW735, and built a workstation (http://lumberjocks.com/projects/33320) for it that has in and out feed tables that greatly minimize snipe. Notice that I said minimize, not eliminate. Most of the time I have no snipe, but every once in a while, I’ll get some. Rather than trying to develop a unified theory of snipe, I now allow for it by making the work piece 4 inches longer than will be required in the project so the snipe can be trimmed off. BTW – I usually take 1/4 turn increments and never more than a 1/2 turn. -- Joe |
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#4 posted 380 days ago |
Martyroc mentioned cleaning up old lumber with a belt sander. I’m afraid that might compound the problem rather than solve it. I try hard to arrange processes so that cutting edges never enter a sanded piece. Sandpaper has the bad habit of leaving grit buried in the wood that dulls subsequent cutting edges quickly. Martyroc is right, however, that the used wood needs to be cleaned. A good sharp paint scraper is quicker than sandpaper. If it gets dull from the dirt, you can quickly touch it up. I’m reluctant to plane used wood unless there is some way to detect broken staples, nails, or other metal leftovers buried and likely unseen. Definitely never plane used concrete form boards! Or boards that sat on gravel or sand. Fresh, clean pallets offer a pretty good source for small pieces, and I’ve been known to saw out the clear parts rather than try to pull the nails or staples. -- Dan Krager, Olney IL http://www.kragerwoodworking.weebly.com |
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#5 posted 380 days ago |
Another snipe help suggestion: -- bill@magraphics.us |
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#6 posted 380 days ago |
I’m going to get one of these Dewalt planers (or current model) in a couple of weeks. Thanks for the post. helluvawreck aka Charles -- If a man does not keep pace with his companions, perhaps it is because he hears a different drummer. Let him step to the music which he hears, however measured or far away. Henry David Thoreau |
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#7 posted 380 days ago |
If you’re going to do something like face frames (for example…. since I have a lot of them to do) would you feed a 10ft board through? Or would you rough size it to lengths, plane it, and then finish size it? I have a stack of maple, straight line ripped one edge, random widths and in 8 and 10 foot lengths. I work alone so I was thinking about trying to get the material into “easier to handle” sizes before planing. Good idea? Bad idea? thanks |
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#8 posted 380 days ago |
Well, Charlie, it depends. Usually it is more efficient and gives more consistent results to plane to the required thickness in the biggest possible sizes you can handle. If you have a 40” or bigger support surface (15” or more on each side of the planer) you can effectively feed and receive a 10’ stick using the technique suggested by Bill White. If you go with precut lengths, you lose an AWFUL lot of good lumber to snipe allowance (see ajosephg post). If you rip the long sticks before planing, be sure to plane them all in one setting of the planer. It is almost impossible to accurately repeat a given thickness in a subsequent batch, digital technology possibly excepted. To ease the handling, and to minimize loss due to cupping, I would rip roughly to width for face frames and then plane the batch before cutting to length. On these smaller planers, feeding two sticks side by side is a bad idea. If you space two apart at opposite sides of the planer, the feed rollers have a better chance of gripping the narrow pieces. Dan -- Dan Krager, Olney IL http://www.kragerwoodworking.weebly.com |
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#9 posted 380 days ago |
Right now I have the infeed and outfeed tables that come with the planer. They make the total support surface about 34 inches. I could pretty easily rig up some temporary roller stands using PVC pipe for rollers, but to pass an 8 or 10 footer through, I think I’d have to move some stuff around in the shop and pass the boards through the open french doors :) (I don’t have a really big shop…. 16×18 and the table saw and workbench are in the middle). And then I’d still have to find a way to pass an 8 footer through the table saw to rip it. I think I have enough room for that (with a very little bit of shuffling-stuff-around) but no way on the 10 footers. I understand about planing it all at once. I had thought of that and figured that when it’s time for planing, it ALL gets planed so it’s all the same thickness. There’s a 3/4” stop on it, but….. just better to do it all at once. So… ok… pretty sure I can plane them at full length. Ripping….. not sure, but maybe. At least the 8 footers. One of the things that’s foremost in my mind all the time…. because I’m working alone all the time …. is “can I set this up to EASILY handle the material and SAFELY guide it through…” whatever process I’m doing. That means, no rickety “jury rigged” supports. Temporary is ok, but has to be solid and stable. And NEVER having my body in an awkward position. And if I’m tired…. the only thing electrical that gets turned on is lights and radio…hehehe….always plenty of cleaning, straightening, etc and it makes the other work go easier and faster. :) |
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#10 posted 379 days ago |
Note: The extensions on my 734 had to be adjusted per the manual. Also note that the end of the extensions are all that contact the wood. They do this to reduce friction. If you are planing a board that is not long enough to go past this edge, it is more likely to snipe. |
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#11 posted 379 days ago |
Had my 734 for a few years and love it. No other tool paid for itself as fast as that planer did. The other guys have covered most of the tips. The one thing that I would add is that you can run boards on edge if you build a jig with adjustable fences that will keep it stable on edge. You can find plans for one on woodmagazine.com -- Greg, Severn MD |
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#12 posted 377 days ago |
All pretty good info and tips for you Charlie. I use a wire brush on all 4 sides of rough lumber to get any grit out of it before jointing or planing. I go back over the wood with a softer brush to get the debris off. Saves those thin two sided blades from some abuse. Light passes are the key as well as flipping the board. The infeed and outfeed tables on my DW planer have adjustment screws so that you can raise the outer ends of the tables to help with snipe. |
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#13 posted 374 days ago |
Hey Charlie, OK. So how to fasten them into a bundle? I’ve been known to screw them together in the end waste, staying to the center to avoid any chance of a knife collision. The screw, of course, goes through the planer horizontally in the center of your bundle ends. Two way tape, temporary glue (hot glue, paper glued between, etc) at the ends will work too, but slower. Just be sure the individual pieces remain upright as you glue or fasten them. Dan -- Dan Krager, Olney IL http://www.kragerwoodworking.weebly.com |
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#14 posted 364 days ago |
Hey Charlie, -- Dan Krager, Olney IL http://www.kragerwoodworking.weebly.com |
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#15 posted 364 days ago |
Post # 4 Dan, your absolutely correct about the sandpaper, however in my case i was talking more extreme. Since i use more than 75% pallet lumber, I run through blades after 2 – 3 pallets, with some heavy sanding before hand with the belt sander i can go about 25-30 before I notice the planer working harder and the boards not as smooth. With Rough sawn lumber its not an issue but with the grit and small particles you chew through blades pretty quickly. Most if not all of the pallets I use are from overseas, and some of the woods you cannot beleive they are using these for pallets, I guess from where these come from, its not exotic hardwood, they treat it like we do pine here. -- Martin ....always count the number of fingers you have before, and after using the saw. |
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#16 posted 364 days ago |
Good info here. -- mike............... |
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#17 posted 363 days ago |
Hey Dan! It’s going well. I have to plane the hard maple for my cabinets in “sessions”. I plane enough for a group of cabinets that all have to gang together so the face frames all match thickness. Separate group or one-off cabinet not such a huge deal and so I can get away with it for this. Once I start making doors, I’m going to just run everything that’s left through the planer because I can start cutting it into sizes that can be stored easily. What a great addition this has been to my tool arsenal. I can’t even imagine doing this without a planer now. :) |
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#18 posted 363 days ago |
There is something strange about snipes. -- Bert |
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#19 posted 363 days ago |
I like to scrub my reclaimed boards with a #5 handplane set for a heavy cut prior to planing. I use a Groz hand plane not any of my stanleys so if i nick the mouth or something im not so upset. Itll get all the dirt and grit off and only need a little touching up to the iron to bring it back nice n sharp again. Its saved me a bunch of planer knives. -- "there aren’t many hand tools as awe-inspiring as the #8 jointer. I mean, it just reeks of cast iron heft and hubris" - Smitty |





















