Well, at about half-price, that is likely to be good value if in good nick. Nothing to be embarrassed about imho.I feel really embarrased to say that I picked up a used DF500 and a box of dominoes for £450 yesterday....
I saw it for sale and thought it was too good a deal to miss, i'll see how I get on with it and go from there, if i dont use it enough then I will end up selling it!
Yeah I havent used it properly yet but it is in good working order, the systainer of dominos is about 50% full. It is very much overkill for my purposes. I have a set of bedroom furniture to make over the next month or two so hopefully it will get some use then and I will see if it is worthwhile keeping it after that.Well, at about half-price, that is likely to be good value if in good nick. Nothing to be embarrassed about imho.
The point that you have missed in the above is that the Domino does the job of both the Doweler (accurate joint placement and joint strength) while giving a stronger joint, and the biscuit joiner (accurate placement in one plane and movement in the other) but also gives a stronger joint than any biscuit can.We use a biscuit jointer and a Mafel Doweler, sometimes both in the same joint. The Mafel doweller is great. Sometimes we use it with both dowel drills in, sometimes just the one. Great for accurate location. The biscuit only offers accuracy in one direction, the dowel is precise in both. Dowels are cheap. Festool Dominoes are not, but in many cases they do a similar job and I thought the Mafel doweller would offer better value in the long run and I have not been disappointed by my decision.
The accurate quote wasOnce upon a time Fine Woodworking magazine did an article comparing joint strengths. If memory serves the joints were in solid wood with the one piece attached into the middle of the second. Picture a seat to back joint in a chair. They did mortice and tennon, lap, loose tennon made with a router as there were no Dominos then, biscuits, dowels and perhaps others. The biscuits were only bested by the traditional mortice and tennon, not by much I'll add. So the assertion that biscuits are only for alignment is not true. If my library wasn't in a mess due to being moved several times while completing the basement I would pull up the article. Perhaps another member has it.
Pete
Your memory suggests that in one test there was a different conclusion, I don’t remember seeing that test.All the tests I have seen suggest that a biscuit provides little, if any, strength to a joint.
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