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- Newsgroups: rec.woodworking
- Subject: Re: Power Hand-Planer Question (naive alert!)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan26.193840.119796@marshall.wvnet.edu>
- From: rcbi27@marshall.wvnet.edu (DBRUM)
- Date: 26 Jan 93 19:38:39 -0500
- References: <C1Gt1J.8F5@news.fai.com>
- Organization: Marshall University
- Lines: 41
-
- In article <C1Gt1J.8F5@news.fai.com>, grina@news.fai.com (Peter Grina) writes:
- >
- > Does anyone have any comments regarding hand-held planers (or is it "planes"?)
- > that are powered with .4 or .5 hp motors? The Sears prices range from
- > about $70 to $150, and the regular old-fashioned(?) planes can easily surpass
- > those prices. What are the limits and capabilities of these hand-held power
- > planers?
- >
- > Since the cutting action appears to be very similar to the jointers, can a
- > hand-held power plane (fastened to a table) serve as a poor man's jointer?
- >
- >
- > Pete Grina
-
- Pete, I've got a Sears hand-held that I paid about $100 for a few years ago
- to try and do what you suggest, especially for the purpose of flattening
- wide, cupped boards that I was fond of working with at that time. It's no
- good for flattening wide boards, you'd have to have the hand of a genie. But I
- guess if you could construct a sufficient table-type thing to fasten the tool
- to, you might be able to get some jointing mileage out of it. But building
- such a table would be quite a demanding feat, at least so it seems to me, but,
- hey, that doesn't at all mean it couldn't be done!
-
- Presently I have my Sears hand-held power planer mounted upside-down in a sort
- of long wooden box, open along the top, for use as a sort of rough surface
- planer. It saves a lot of effort in removing saw mill marks--boy, that's hard
- work with a manual plane!!!! But, really, you'd be better off getting one of
- those Sears benchtop planers that are only about $199 or $179 on sale. On
- the hand-held planer you only have an infeed table about 2 1/2" long, so it's
- really hard to accurately joint a board that's more than a foot or two in
- length. If you try a heavy piece of wood, say an ash two-by-four that's 8 or
- 10 feet long, it's perfectly impossible to hold the thing firmly and flatly
- down against the tiny infeed ledge by mere finesse--I tried it once, for a
- whole afternoon, and became exhausted. I did gradually manage to get the
- saw mill marks off the ash 2-bys, but had to follow up with a belt sander to
- remove all the erratic ups and downs left by the planer.
-
- --
-
- "I laughed one time and they
- were on the phone to the Man." --Cool Hand Luke
-