ByronBlack
Established Member
Some interesting points here. The reason I chose this morticer over a K1 or something similar was mainly price, location, weight and the size.
I could have spent more money for an integrated sliding table but then I would either be compromising capacity and power, or I would need more floorspace or a bigger budget. When all things were considered I felt a machine like this for the money would represent the best deal, as I can now spend the money I have saved on a quality set of chisels and sharpening cones.
Making some auxillary end stops should be pretty easy - making a similar setup to how people make these mitre-stations, and If i'm really wanting an XY table, there are many aftermarket ones available - even a compound table might do the trick, BUT I just don't need the speed yet.
Like you Mr G, I mark out all my mortices first - more out of fear of Cucumbering something up than anything else.
So far i'm impressed with this one. It's got good capacity, and goes through the hardest wood that I own with the budget chisel that came with it (albeit not in one stroke). If I ever go down the route of batch processing then a Sedegwick or Multico would definitly be on my shopping list, but for now i'm just a hobbyist, so speed/repeatability are not the highest requirements - yet.
I could have spent more money for an integrated sliding table but then I would either be compromising capacity and power, or I would need more floorspace or a bigger budget. When all things were considered I felt a machine like this for the money would represent the best deal, as I can now spend the money I have saved on a quality set of chisels and sharpening cones.
Making some auxillary end stops should be pretty easy - making a similar setup to how people make these mitre-stations, and If i'm really wanting an XY table, there are many aftermarket ones available - even a compound table might do the trick, BUT I just don't need the speed yet.
Like you Mr G, I mark out all my mortices first - more out of fear of Cucumbering something up than anything else.
So far i'm impressed with this one. It's got good capacity, and goes through the hardest wood that I own with the budget chisel that came with it (albeit not in one stroke). If I ever go down the route of batch processing then a Sedegwick or Multico would definitly be on my shopping list, but for now i'm just a hobbyist, so speed/repeatability are not the highest requirements - yet.