Bodgers
Established Member
If noise is a factor you want one with an induction motor. Comparing noise levels on uni motor lunch box planers is like comparing various pain levels of hacking your arms off in different ways: it is all bad.sunnybob":zs2hpi9j said:I keep reading reviews about lots of makes, but it comes back to two things for me. Apart from the makita, the noise levels are mentioned every time. extreme and painful noise levels. Cant have that. Makita confidently boasts of being the quietest.
The other is the snipe. Just read a triton review that said he likes the machine, but loses an inch either end of the wood. Cant be doing with that either.
Again, makita claim very small fractions of an inch snipe each time.
I'd like to save a couple hundred quid, but not with those downsides attached.
I really need to have a go with one of these makita's.
Cheapest Planer/thicknesser units with an induction motor is the Metabo which weighs in at about £500 (HC260). The his is what I would upgrade my Titan uni motor screamer too...I think Axminster do one similar.
What you have to remember is the act of the rotating planer blades munching through hardwood exceeds the sound level of even the loudest universal brush motor cheapy. So it is only really going to be quieter whilst the wood isn't touching the cutters. Then you are looking at helical blade support...
Sent from my MI 3W using Tapatalk