You echo my thoughts @Spectric ! £150 'ish.Looks like another quality item from Benchdogs, surprised it has taken them this long to get one to market, for sheet goods they can be handy and but I think they are aimed for repetition whereas for a few cuts a rail square can do it just as easy. I must admit I am trying not to collect too many tools that basically all achieve the same end result, space and cost ! Be interesting to see the price for one of these and it looks like you also need there fence and stops t make full use.
Maybe it was just the way he was holding/supporting the rails when the rails were hinged upwards, but it looked like the rail wouldn't stay up on it's own....The original Festool one does!
That would annoy me, as when you're changing from one piece of material to the next one, you would need to keep one hand to support the rail....??!!
Or am I wrong?...
From the video, unsure about the 'gap' under the track, how big it is, what impact it might have, not holding the work piece?Couple of general comments.
Will this not reduce the maximum usable width of a workpiece for a given width of worktop? The mechanism sits on the top surface.the Benchdogs set is the only one that will attach to the surface of the MFT top
Yes, that’s something I’ll be looking at. My understanding is that the minimum rail height is 6mm off the surface as the hinge is surface mounted. If you wanted to cut something thinner than that, then a 6mm spoilerboard to pack out the height would be an easy solution. Also forgot to mention that the Benchdogs hinge has presets for material thicknesses; again, interested to see how that works in practice when the hinge is up against a wall, for example.From the video, unsure about the 'gap' under the track, how big it is, what impact it might have, not holding the work piece?
I'd be interested to hear what you think of this aspect Peter.
From the video, unsure about the 'gap' under the track, how big it is, what impact it might have, not holding the work piece?
I'd be interested to hear what you think of this aspect Peter.
Yes, as does the Benchdogs fence. For a deeper crosscut you can always turn the MFT top ’portrait’ instead of ‘landscape’, but yes, the reduced capacity in ‘normal’ landscape orientation is also something I’ll be looking at closely.Will this not reduce the maximum usable width of a workpiece for a given width of worktop? The mechanism sits on the top surface.
I think this will appeal to many but to me it is a bit like Tesco's, it is available but a lot of alternatives that may suit your needs better.
<grin/> you and your 'wall' issues! How about cutting a hole in the MFT in which to sit the hinge? Still needagain, interested to see how that works in practice when the hinge is up against a wall, for example.
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