rafezetter
Troll Hunter
LFS19":35048dlh said:I see what you mean, sorry; I was getting my names mixed up.
What I was indeed enquiring about was thicknessers, so I was lucky people have informed me regarding them.
Perhaps a thicknesser wouldn’t be essential, though the screwfix brand electric plane I have isn’t really very good.
i suspect i’d need to be building some sort of jig, placing the machine upside down and building a box shaped housing to act as a fence for the wood to pass through: as a thicknesser would have.
What I was refering to regarding the 12 inch vs 6 inch was in relation to having a thickness planer. I was unsure what the benifit was of having a 12 inch when you could just have a six inch and glue boards together afterwards.
Thanks for the reply.
LFS - do yourself a favor - set fire to your electric planer.
Now - right now, even if you are at work, drive home and destroy it.
They are an abomination meant for construction grade "woodwork" and will give you pinapple poor results almost every time. Sure people use them, quite often for shooting doors to fit, but it's the main antagonist why you've got massive gaps around your internal doors when they should be 2mm all round (tuppence test).
Setting it upside down in a jig with a small fence etc has been done, but will only really be useful for squaring off toothpicks or going into business making artisan matches out of the best and finest hardwoods.
If set inside a LARGE and LONG jig to give a LONG fence to run against, you might have a moderate chance - but the time it'll take you to make such a contraption will be long and you're better off learning latin, or pole dancing with that time.
If you are hellbent on doing that, google Matthias Wandel. - The planer not the pole dancing.
As I said before about the 12 version (or a 10) is just that it gives you more options down the line - this isn't a small outlay and you'll not be wanting to buy twice if the one you buy is good quality but a bit too narrow - see my above as to wide boards etc.
Wider also has the added advantage of not using the same section of blades over and over - to mean you can pass stuff through - left side / right side - of the blades so they last longer between sharpenings, and until you get proficient with sharpening them, you'll be paying each time to have them done.
I know it seems daunting to have all this added stuff to consider, but for the occasional hobbyist they save a LOT more stress than they create