A
Anonymous
Guest
Yep.
'tis true. I am sure many are shocked and laughing :wink:
My recent adventure with the table is part of the reason, with a small windfall being the other.
I have now watched the DVD twice (second time to make sure it wasn't a spoof )
Well, I hope that owners of the Rat will post here to refute or agree with the following and help me make my mind up. The cost of the Rat is in my opinion over-the-top for what it is, but this time, cost is not a factor in my decision.
Seems to me that cutting profiles or long trenches on the rat is at best stupid. A silly little brush as the only support for the wood :shock: :shock: I really don't care if it works OK. Your hands are under the table near the cutter and out of sight and the wood is balancing on a 40mm wide scrubbing brush held in a weak-looking plastic clamp!!!
OK, so router table is better here by far with it's long support and gravity working with it rather than against.
Or do users know different?
Joints? Well, the Rat looks to be great for machine cut DTs (although I think the procedure has plenty of scope for errors and the example joint in the DVD is a SLOPPY fit) and uses tools that give a close to hand-cut appearance. I guess that practice (and jigs?) will lead to superb joints.
Mortice and tenons? I was seriously impressed with the tenoning. Cheaper than the Leigh and probably as good. I think this is where the rat scores highly over the table.
Mortices? not so sure but it looked OK. I suspect that I would not use it for mortices and would use either 2 fences on a hand-held router or my morticing machine.
Sliding DTs? Across the width of the board, superb from what I saw and much better than the table.
Raised panels? Looks pretty impressive and safe and uses a standard parallel sided cutter which are cheaper than a raising bit. I think it is limited in the size of door though and this might be a major limitation as it looked to be only about 30cm to me.
Do users know different here? I hope the capacity is much larger.
Finger joints? Looked OK, but prone to small errors again as all is by eye, pencil and blutac!!! I think my router table will be the better bet for finger joints (Incra fence). I see an opportunity to develop the tool for jobs such as this to make it a little easier to use accurately.
One of the main tasks I would want to accomplish with the rat is to cut slots in wood for bolts to pass through. I find this pretty dangerous on the table and almost impossible with hand-held routers is the stock is not 100mm+ wide. I think the Rat will score here but wonder that the max. length I can run through the cutter is when using the clamps and winding handle?
My final thought is that WoodRat are not really offering good value. The Rat needs the plunge bars and DT cutters to get the best from it but none are supplied in the STEEP asking price. I find this a concern and wonder what else one needs to buy to make it work well????
Please offer comments and advice.
'tis true. I am sure many are shocked and laughing :wink:
My recent adventure with the table is part of the reason, with a small windfall being the other.
I have now watched the DVD twice (second time to make sure it wasn't a spoof )
Well, I hope that owners of the Rat will post here to refute or agree with the following and help me make my mind up. The cost of the Rat is in my opinion over-the-top for what it is, but this time, cost is not a factor in my decision.
Seems to me that cutting profiles or long trenches on the rat is at best stupid. A silly little brush as the only support for the wood :shock: :shock: I really don't care if it works OK. Your hands are under the table near the cutter and out of sight and the wood is balancing on a 40mm wide scrubbing brush held in a weak-looking plastic clamp!!!
OK, so router table is better here by far with it's long support and gravity working with it rather than against.
Or do users know different?
Joints? Well, the Rat looks to be great for machine cut DTs (although I think the procedure has plenty of scope for errors and the example joint in the DVD is a SLOPPY fit) and uses tools that give a close to hand-cut appearance. I guess that practice (and jigs?) will lead to superb joints.
Mortice and tenons? I was seriously impressed with the tenoning. Cheaper than the Leigh and probably as good. I think this is where the rat scores highly over the table.
Mortices? not so sure but it looked OK. I suspect that I would not use it for mortices and would use either 2 fences on a hand-held router or my morticing machine.
Sliding DTs? Across the width of the board, superb from what I saw and much better than the table.
Raised panels? Looks pretty impressive and safe and uses a standard parallel sided cutter which are cheaper than a raising bit. I think it is limited in the size of door though and this might be a major limitation as it looked to be only about 30cm to me.
Do users know different here? I hope the capacity is much larger.
Finger joints? Looked OK, but prone to small errors again as all is by eye, pencil and blutac!!! I think my router table will be the better bet for finger joints (Incra fence). I see an opportunity to develop the tool for jobs such as this to make it a little easier to use accurately.
One of the main tasks I would want to accomplish with the rat is to cut slots in wood for bolts to pass through. I find this pretty dangerous on the table and almost impossible with hand-held routers is the stock is not 100mm+ wide. I think the Rat will score here but wonder that the max. length I can run through the cutter is when using the clamps and winding handle?
My final thought is that WoodRat are not really offering good value. The Rat needs the plunge bars and DT cutters to get the best from it but none are supplied in the STEEP asking price. I find this a concern and wonder what else one needs to buy to make it work well????
Please offer comments and advice.