Adam W.
A Major Clanger
Should be in the box, looks like this......
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I don’t really think it’s a luxury item in any situation. Also you are likely to be able to sell it for far more than ½ the price you paid ¾ is more like the selling price and that is based on the current new price not the lower price you paidWhere I am sat with the Festool domino is knowing that this is a luxury item in my situation, its for my own house renovation i.e. I'm not on the clock. So to pay full whack I've just got to get my head around how beneficial it will be to the cabinetry I've got planned. That said, if I drop a grand on something I can sell for 500 quid after a couple of years, I won't lose too much sleep over it.
Too good to be true, but it you can buy it through your Visa account you will be better protected, than either PayPal or Ebay.I was thinking of picking up a second hand df500 (as I believe that's the right unit for someone who mostly works in 18mm panels). I've seen one on local FB for £450 as the full kit including a sustainer of dominos etc and given the retail price seemed too good to be true, but is that where the 2nd hand mkt is on average?
Why try and make loose tennon joints without a Domino, the Domino makes an oblong hole very fast and that makes the loose tennon joint viable. Without a Domino then jigs to make that oblong hole are not as easy but probably as accurate if not more so but why the loose tenon joint when you have other options. I have been down the XL700 route and in my opinion the 500 is the better tool but have now gone back to using dowels, I accept they are much slower but are much more precise and versatile in layout, have both the Dowelmax and Jessem doweling jigs which are both really precise although we have lost UK support for the Dowelmax, you can buy direct though.If money was no object I’d get the Domino in a heartbeat. However as a DIY’er the time it will save doesn’t stack up financially, so I’m currently saving up pennies for the most recent iteration of @petermillard Loose Tenon Jig which is the most elegant way I have seen to make Domino joints without a Domino. Products
Yes and no, it works on the sloppy setting but it is not as easy on the tight setting, only talking about the 700 here as I do suspect it is easier to get alignment with the lighter and less bulky 500 that has a much shallower plunge depth. Saying that on my last attempts with the 700 I tried easing the rounded ends of the actual wooden domino and that did help so maybe some hope yet.The beauty of it is you can just put a pencil mark accross the joint and whack it together in a minute.
I have a 700, quite often I do one side on the tight setting and the other on loose, this is especially useful on big long tables and things.Yes and no, it works on the sloppy setting but it is not as easy on the tight setting, only talking about the 700 here as I do suspect it is easier to get alignment with the lighter and less bulky 500 that has a much shallower plunge depth. Saying that on my last attempts with the 700 I tried easing the rounded ends of the actual wooden domino and that did help so maybe some hope yet.
I do that with a biscuit joint and it has not cost me a leg to buy it.The beauty of it is you can just put a pencil mark accross the joint and whack it together in a minute.
Kinda different though. I think I’m right that biscuits are just for alignments and add no strength, whereas Dominos do both?I do that with a biscuit joint and it has not cost me a leg to buy it.
why not? I like it as a form of connecting and it’s more forgiving than dowels, which to me makes it more enjoyable and with the jig mentioned is quick tooWhy try and make loose tennon joints without a Domino, .
As long as you draw the line across in one swipe, it doesn’t have to be straight, and line up the mark right at the edge of the board with the line engraved on the domino then even two tight settings line up perfectly. That is with the 500 though.Why try and make loose tennon joints without a Domino, the Domino makes an oblong hole very fast and that makes the loose tennon joint viable. Without a Domino then jigs to make that oblong hole are not as easy but probably as accurate if not more so but why the loose tenon joint when you have other options. I have been down the XL700 route and in my opinion the 500 is the better tool but have now gone back to using dowels, I accept they are much slower but are much more precise and versatile in layout, have both the Dowelmax and Jessem doweling jigs which are both really precise although we have lost UK support for the Dowelmax, you can buy direct though.
Yes and no, it works on the sloppy setting but it is not as easy on the tight setting, only talking about the 700 here as I do suspect it is easier to get alignment with the lighter and less bulky 500 that has a much shallower plunge depth. Saying that on my last attempts with the 700 I tried easing the rounded ends of the actual wooden domino and that did help so maybe some hope yet.
Most likely stolen if it exists then. Good move getting a new one.I think you were all right
Contacted seller to see it and was told absolutely fine and was given the address for an Asda car park
The other warning sign I noticed after the fact is that the only joined Facebook recently.
New one it is
That maybe your experience. It is far from mine and I am using domino cutters that are not worn.For large units and wardrobes however it still relies on clamping them together until the glue sets
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