Togalosh":1c3emszn said:
I'm also looking for a morticer but have a limited budget & space...and next to no experience of them to make a sound judgement on what is quality or not. I can't afford to buy anything duff (axi AW16BMST2 ) but can't afford £500+ for something really good...the classic conundrum. The voice in my head says just keep with the chisels until you have the money/space but the time it takes to chisel out 8 mortices could be time better spent.
What bench top models can anyone recommend ?
I think you're being rather inconsistent:
What defines a "good" morticer, compared to a "duff" one?
Power? If you want one with a bigger motor, it will cost more.
Capacity? If you want something really huge, it won't be benchtop. I certainly can't easily lift mine, and usually take the table and pillar off to move it in pieces.
The AW16BM is far from duff: It's the one I have, it works pretty well and I like it, and it's very close (almost identical) to at least one other popular model from anther brand (at a significantly higher price, last time I looked). BUT, it's not a large morticer. It has limitations, but within them it works well.
Mine's the earlier model - I can't speak to the changes, such as the wheel instead of the lever for moving along the mortice slot.
Things that made it sing:
- getting the chisels really sharp and smooth on the outside faces
- sharpening the augers
- setting it up properly (auger-chisel gap is quite critical and not the same for all sizes)
- organising effective chip removal (vacuum nozzle almost over the mortice)
- roller stand at the right height to feed easily (so it's not relying on the clamp not to twist)
- sandpaper glued on the clamp face (improves the grip hugely)
None of the above has anything to do with its quality really.
That said, I had two issues from new:
- motor failure: I had two fail. Axminster were very responsive. I think it was poor quality copper wire and/or varnish used in the windings. I had another induction motor go in an otherwise completely unconnected machine too. I've good reason to think the motors were both made in China around the same time, and I've since heard of other failures that point back to the same problem
- back fence squareness/strength: It is a design weakness, and it wasn't square to start with. Two simple fixes: shimming it square and adding the sandpaper (above). The latter vastly reduces the amount of clamping force needed, so the fence isn't stressed anything like as much.
If you want it for industrial production work, that little morticer isn't the one to get, definitely, but it works for me as a hobbyist. It's limited, certainly, but it's not duff, and it still costs less than a decent cordless screwdriver set.
E.