Hi
I have traditionally done all of my stock preparation by hand. When I was making my casement window recently, this took a very significant proportion of the time for the project. Probably 50%. It’s a miserable job, but I found that for me, it’s been the only way to guarantee flat and square stock to the dimensions I need with a proper finish. But it is time-consuming.
A couple of years back, I bought myself a Triton thicknesser, and I’ve had a number of tries getting it to work acceptably. I understand that it’s not the worst of those tools on the market, so I can’t simply blame the quality of the machine, but I have never managed to get a result that I am happy with and give the same quality of output that I get from hand-tools. Generally the problem is snipe. I’ve followed all of the YouTube advice, but still the snipe is there. Often very slight, a few thou probably but still there, which is not acceptable. From my perspective, the tool does not work. It cannot produce a properly flat board. So it sits under the bench unused.
i’ve been toying with the idea of using the thicknesser to get very close to the final thickness and then giving it final smoothing with a hand plane to get to the exact final dimension and remove the snipe. But really, for the money, I don’t feel I should have to do this.
Is it just me, or do these thicknessers just not really work properly? I really wish it did, it would save me huge amounts of effort.
Steve
I have traditionally done all of my stock preparation by hand. When I was making my casement window recently, this took a very significant proportion of the time for the project. Probably 50%. It’s a miserable job, but I found that for me, it’s been the only way to guarantee flat and square stock to the dimensions I need with a proper finish. But it is time-consuming.
A couple of years back, I bought myself a Triton thicknesser, and I’ve had a number of tries getting it to work acceptably. I understand that it’s not the worst of those tools on the market, so I can’t simply blame the quality of the machine, but I have never managed to get a result that I am happy with and give the same quality of output that I get from hand-tools. Generally the problem is snipe. I’ve followed all of the YouTube advice, but still the snipe is there. Often very slight, a few thou probably but still there, which is not acceptable. From my perspective, the tool does not work. It cannot produce a properly flat board. So it sits under the bench unused.
i’ve been toying with the idea of using the thicknesser to get very close to the final thickness and then giving it final smoothing with a hand plane to get to the exact final dimension and remove the snipe. But really, for the money, I don’t feel I should have to do this.
Is it just me, or do these thicknessers just not really work properly? I really wish it did, it would save me huge amounts of effort.
Steve