Buying Sawn Timber + Planer Thicknesser V Planed Timber

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ziplock9000

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I currently buy planed redwood timber that I glue together to make backing boards for plaques. It works out about to be £26.40 for 4.8m delivered.

I was thinking about buying a very cheap planer/thicknesser for £160 ish and then buying sawn timber and doing the planing myself.

I was expecting this to be cheaper overall, but it doesn't seem to be the case.

Just buying planed directly seems to be cheaper.

I've even looked for odd wood (like scaffold board etc) on Facebook Marketplace that I could plane and it's again, more expensive.

Is this the general consensus for planed softwood like redwood?
 
All depends upon the task in hand, redwood can be fine for many jobs but check it for both squareness and sizes. For other jobs using more exotic wood then having a decent P/T can help but again access to a decent wood supplier can be just as easy if they can provide the wood needed to the size you want.

Size can be a factor unless you can work with the off the shelf sizes, once you need odd sizes t get the look then having a P/T would be very handy but buying a cheap one could just give more issues than you had before as they do not just work out of the box as many have found.
 
I use junk wood for a lot of my projects, even when I buy PAR wood I have to resize.
After hand planning for 30 plus years I bought a p/t ..brill
As other said there are the neg sides
Eg I was working some junk wood, religiously removed the nails....rechecked ok
Odd noise as the wood went through.... there was stones embedded in the wood.. notched the blade in a number of places
A lot more expense and agro to sort the p/t than if I had been using a hand tool.
I had to hand plane the final 2 mm to take the ridges out.
 

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While notched baldes are a bug&#ration there is a quick fix if the blades are still sharp. Move the blades sideways a bit so the notches no longer line up. No more ridges.
To the OPs question. A planer/thicknesser can be very handy and save a lot of the grunt work sizing timber. It gives you the freedom to size wood as you like rather than being restricted to the size of wood available at the store. Recycle wood as well but as said above be careful what you put through. Lastly picking the cheapest machine out there may be a bit of a gamble as to how long it will last. Check warranty and those sorts of things.
Regards
John
 
Slight word of caution on buying cheap planers thicknesses. I bought the Rutland one. Pretty hopeless for anything over 1000mm in length, struggles with hardwood, and died in a plume of smoke after about a month (to be fair, probably user error - trying to take off too much of an old oak board in one pass). Invested in one of the bigger Axminster machines, so much better (as it should be a 4 times. the price). As my mother used to say "buy cheap buy dear"!!
 
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