LancsRick
Established Member
Intrigued about this one...
I've got a restored Cooksley P/T, absolute lump of heavy old kmachinery and does a fab job of planing that I could only ever improve with a helical which I'm not bothering with. I've also spent a bunch of time and effort setting up the thicknessing aspect, and ended up with a truly minimal amount of snipe which I'm really pleased with.
So where am I going with this thread?
I've also got a lunchbox Triton P/T, which has the unique ability to take 230v and turn it into a level of noise that would shatter the world. But I digress...
It gives an absolutely brilliant finish, and can take far shorter material than the Cooksley. Plus it can reliable take fine material down to a few mm and still thickness it well.
So what's the view on the lunchbox vs P/T debate? I'm certainly in the camp that unless it's a chunky piece I go for the lunchbox, for that reason it's stayed in my workshop for years.
Interested in any and all experiences.
I've got a restored Cooksley P/T, absolute lump of heavy old kmachinery and does a fab job of planing that I could only ever improve with a helical which I'm not bothering with. I've also spent a bunch of time and effort setting up the thicknessing aspect, and ended up with a truly minimal amount of snipe which I'm really pleased with.
So where am I going with this thread?
I've also got a lunchbox Triton P/T, which has the unique ability to take 230v and turn it into a level of noise that would shatter the world. But I digress...
It gives an absolutely brilliant finish, and can take far shorter material than the Cooksley. Plus it can reliable take fine material down to a few mm and still thickness it well.
So what's the view on the lunchbox vs P/T debate? I'm certainly in the camp that unless it's a chunky piece I go for the lunchbox, for that reason it's stayed in my workshop for years.
Interested in any and all experiences.