jasonwood
Member
Hi all,
I'm currently making a bed (well trying to) but I am struggling to get straight planks.
I bought some PAR redwood for the posts and rails etc but it has warped after a couple of weeks in my home.
The rest of the wood I'm using is also warped (mainly cupped) and a trip to my local merchant didn't result in finding any decent straight lengths either.
But of course even if I had found some decent wood at the merchant, after bringing it home I assume it will have probably warped anyway.
So, I have decided I need to buy a thicknesser.
I have no experience with them whatsoever so I was hoping to garner some advice.
I don't want to spend too much money, ideally less than £300, so I have 4 questions:
1) Is there a good thicknesser available for my budget which will be robust and perfectly square? The last thing I want to do it spend £300 on something that won't produce square wood!
2) I see a lot of these planer/thickenesser combos. What is the advantage of having the planer on top? I'd rather just have a thicknesser unless there is something you can do with the planer and you can't with the thicknesser?
3) I've seen people on here praise the DEWALT DW733 - but it is slightly out of my budget. Is there really nothing as good as this for less money?
4) Is buying a second hand planer worth it or would I bet better off getting a new one?
Thanks for any advice
Jason
I'm currently making a bed (well trying to) but I am struggling to get straight planks.
I bought some PAR redwood for the posts and rails etc but it has warped after a couple of weeks in my home.
The rest of the wood I'm using is also warped (mainly cupped) and a trip to my local merchant didn't result in finding any decent straight lengths either.
But of course even if I had found some decent wood at the merchant, after bringing it home I assume it will have probably warped anyway.
So, I have decided I need to buy a thicknesser.
I have no experience with them whatsoever so I was hoping to garner some advice.
I don't want to spend too much money, ideally less than £300, so I have 4 questions:
1) Is there a good thicknesser available for my budget which will be robust and perfectly square? The last thing I want to do it spend £300 on something that won't produce square wood!
2) I see a lot of these planer/thickenesser combos. What is the advantage of having the planer on top? I'd rather just have a thicknesser unless there is something you can do with the planer and you can't with the thicknesser?
3) I've seen people on here praise the DEWALT DW733 - but it is slightly out of my budget. Is there really nothing as good as this for less money?
4) Is buying a second hand planer worth it or would I bet better off getting a new one?
Thanks for any advice
Jason