Devmeister
Established Member
I just researched the Juuma planes. It appears, from multiple internet sources, that the wood river planes, the juuma planes and the Luban planes are all made by the same factory in China.
It’s also confirmed that the juuma planes and Luban planes use C260 to make the caps. That is neither here nor there.
Each local retailer specs out what they want and the Chinese build it with minor changes.
These planes were referred to in multiple net sources as Lie Nielsen clones. Several reviews noted them as such but also noted that they are not up to the standards of LN. However at 1/3 to 1/2 the price, they should be considered.
But they all compare themselves to the LN. Works almost as good as LN. Looks just like a LN. Performs almost as well as a LN. And so on it goes…… Well eventually you realize everyone wants to be LN and maybe you should just get a LN.
LN prices have been constant and reflect the skill and workmanship invested in the tool. If the Chinese planes want to be equal, then they need to execute equal. Unfortunately that means pricing their work accordingly. No one has an issue here. Equal pay for equal work.
If you look at Holtys planes, you enter another realm. The quality of his work exceeds the standards in aerospace! And his prices reflect that. Overkill? Most likely.
It’s also confirmed that the juuma planes and Luban planes use C260 to make the caps. That is neither here nor there.
Each local retailer specs out what they want and the Chinese build it with minor changes.
These planes were referred to in multiple net sources as Lie Nielsen clones. Several reviews noted them as such but also noted that they are not up to the standards of LN. However at 1/3 to 1/2 the price, they should be considered.
But they all compare themselves to the LN. Works almost as good as LN. Looks just like a LN. Performs almost as well as a LN. And so on it goes…… Well eventually you realize everyone wants to be LN and maybe you should just get a LN.
LN prices have been constant and reflect the skill and workmanship invested in the tool. If the Chinese planes want to be equal, then they need to execute equal. Unfortunately that means pricing their work accordingly. No one has an issue here. Equal pay for equal work.
If you look at Holtys planes, you enter another realm. The quality of his work exceeds the standards in aerospace! And his prices reflect that. Overkill? Most likely.
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