johnnyb
Established Member
Thought I'd give this an unbiased review. I brought it brand new secondhand with no box. It's a jig with a single purpose... finger joints or box joints. It's modus operandi is derived from a myriad of home made jigs using a sliding carriage and a guide finger, so the next tooth is indexed from the previous. This usually results in really annoying cumulative errors on home made stuff. And interminable setting up. The I box is really nicely made and if you follow the instructions and watch the 1/2 dozen or so vids on YouTube a couple of goes and your making perfect box joints. Now the negative is it requires an accurate us style table saw with a dado set or a suitable router table with us style mitre slot. The jig requires sandpaper to be glued to the backboard as router put sideways pressure on the workpiece(and side spelnching can cause issues)
Now I can make perfect super strong boxes in minutes. They are remarkably strong even without glue.
If you've got suitable equipment then it's a very effective jig.
Other box joint jigs use the dovetail jig method.
Incra have very cleverly semi automated the setup arrangement. It's helped by using a set of digital calipers when doing a new set up. And perfect (space and finger the same size) results in far to tight a fit. 4 or 5 thou "space" allows room for assembly.
Now I can make perfect super strong boxes in minutes. They are remarkably strong even without glue.
If you've got suitable equipment then it's a very effective jig.
Other box joint jigs use the dovetail jig method.
Incra have very cleverly semi automated the setup arrangement. It's helped by using a set of digital calipers when doing a new set up. And perfect (space and finger the same size) results in far to tight a fit. 4 or 5 thou "space" allows room for assembly.