-
Posts
725 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
7
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Posts posted by SetBuilder
-
-
I would have to say its Paulk inspired. I will not be adding holes to it as its too much of a pain to be bothered with. I drilled out a smaller Paulk inspired top for my tool box at work and I said never again unless I have CNC do it.
-
When I was doing a gut renovation on my current house all crews cleaned up after themselves before leaving at the end of the day. Then I stayed and cleaned up even further. A neat job site goes a long way with crews and inspectors.
At my job all tools get put away at the end of the day, then we sweep and clean in the morning. We also are lucky to have guys that sweep our area during the day and pick up scraps. When the shop is rolling we probably fill 2 40 yard containers a day with various scraps.
My home shop can get a bit messy at times, but I always clean up before starting new projects.
- 3
-
2 hours ago, Fletcher94 said:
Looks like good work.
What made you choose acrylic?
The acrylic was used as a door for a job, once it came back it would have ended up in the dumpster. So I cut out the mortised hinges and holes for the door handle and I was left with a piece roughly 30 x 60 which would work well for some metal cabinets I have.
Its just something that was on my list to make for a while and I had some spare time between jobs.
-
-
The new one arrived and you can definitely hear the hammers impact. The first one was a defective unit. It is still a nice quiet gun compared to a standard impact.
-
On 6/17/2017 at 11:11 PM, regopit said:
Just once you get the hang of it you really see a time savings. If you make a jig to hold your trim it makes so much easier. go over to you tube and watch Gary Katz he gives some good tips on the Collins foot.
I looked it up and its Gary Katz.... From what I could tell the Collins coping foot is only available for the Festool Carvex and Maffel.
-
I don't make the commercials you watch, I make the commercials you watch Better!
- 6
-
-
Not sure if it's a regional thing or what. There are probably 20 sets of Ridgid boxes floating around my shop at any given time.
On stage all you see is different departments using Ridgid. I can't recall the last time I saw a set of Dewalt boxes.
-
At about 6:27 in he mentions the price. Very nice set up, but I could buy two Ridgid sets and still have money left over.
- 3
-
The carry out system looks pretty looks pretty sweet. In one video I saw it said Sept release and 280.00 list price for the 3 box stack. I hope HD will drop the price a bit or they will price themselves out of the market. HD sells the 3 box Ridgid system for 130.00, that is quite the difference.
In my business you can show up on any stage and there are a ton on Ridgid boxes. Carpenters, set dressers, grips, art dept all use them. If Milwaukee sticks to the higher price tag, then I'll stick with Ridgid boxes.
I have the Milwaukee 46 in chest and I'm kind of disappointed in it. After about 9-10 months of use the drawers are kind of sticking and not sliding straight. I guess its good for a home owner, but not in a commercial setting. I miss my Matco box. I do not see it lasting past the 2 year mark...
-
3 minutes ago, Bremon said:
Like their 10" mitre? Oh wait... yes I agree with your point ?
Good point! I was all set to buy one till some of the reviews started coming in and then I decided against a cordless miter saw.
I think the bearings are going in my Dewalt non slider 12in saw. So I am currently undecided on what to replace it with. I may hold out and see what the Festool Kapax 60 goes for or just buy another Dewalt. I have another Dewalt 12in slider that is in great shape.
-
11 hours ago, comp56 said:
Pretty cool video on how it works...
The scraper looked pretty cool then I saw the 70.00 price tag. Not too bad but kind of a gamble for something I've never seen used. http://www.toolnut.com/festool-499749-edge-banding-carbide-scraper.html?utm_source=google_shopping&gclid=CIHk--GMqNQCFQ92fgodC34LXg
- 1
-
I was hoping for a cordless router, but after using Ridgids, cordless router I would not bother buying one. If they updated the M18 jig saw, I would grab that.
- 1
-
20 minutes ago, Jronman said:
Many are saying a sander and cordless table saw are coming. I wouldn't be surprised if a cordless router and tracksaw show up.
Sorry but I would much rather see a corded table saw and track saw from Milwaukee proven, before a cordless version.
- 1
-
They are still listed on the European website. Usually all the new stuff shows up there first.
-
19 hours ago, Jronman said:
From what I have heard dual battery m18 miter saw is a thing.
Someone once posted about it here, saying a friend saw it. But no link or pic was ever produced.
-
One of the things I really like about the Domino is the ability to set a "Tight" vs "Loose" dominos. This ways its simple to get ends to line up perfectly. With dowels if your just a little off you always seem to be wrestling with pieces on glue up.
- 1
-
I have the Milwaukee 2757-20 OneKey 1/4 impact and its a waste of money for me. I used it for 6 months and bought the Surge and it just sits in my box now. We were working on stage and I loaned my Surge to a friend and used the One key and it began acting up. The forward / rev switch was not working, it would just get stuck in rev and after a while it would get stuck in Forward. I filled out the E - Service form and need to send it back.
If I had to do it again I would not have spent the extra 50.00 for One Key on the impact.
-
Maffel just doesn't have a presence in the US, there are 3 Festool dealers within 30min of my house where I can see, feel and purchase most of the Festool line up. Even ordering Maffel online is kind of a mystery here.
-
9 hours ago, Jronman said:
I prefer cordless regardless of if I have power or not. If I have hundreds of outlets in front of me in a shop with plenty of power I will pick cordless tools every time. Cords are accidents waiting to happen. If you got multiple tools plugged in your bound to trip on a cord eventually, get them tangled, or a cord is going to snag on a corner then you gotta fuss with adjusting the cord. I foresee in the next 10 to 20 years that if nothing game changing comes from smaller corded tools that they will be a thing of the past.
That is one of the nice things about Festool cords. Just run one cord and un plug from the tool as needed.
I have an old Milwaukee screw gun where the cord had a twist lock on the handle similar to Festool,
I wish all manufacturers had something similar.
- 1
-
4 hours ago, Jronman said:
It's hard to go wrong with a Festool. Just about everything is great. Good features, lots of accessories, and great build quality. The only thing is the price is premium and some units may still only be available in metric which for us in the states may take some getting used to.
Festool track saws are available in metric and imperial now.
-
I guess its because I work in a shop environment and not in the field. My cordless circular saw is just a 6 1/2 in and thats all I need. We have corded worm drives in the knack box, but rarely use them.
I have the corded version of the Ridgid router and did not like the cordless because of the extra weight of the battery.
But I'm mostly building with 1x3s or 1x6s cutting lots of MDF or 3/4 ply, my tool box is on wheels and always close by. My work area has 4 sliding miter saws and two table saws. If I was doing residential construction then my tool choice would probably be different.
-
12 hours ago, Bremon said:
@SetBuilder or large SDS, or Sawzall. Circular saw. Grinder. Lots of applications for it. Impact driver not so much.
I'm unclear in what you are saying.... Are you saying you would or wouldn't use a 9.0 battery on the above tools?
Dewalt 20v multitool issue !
in Dewalt
Posted
I ran my corded Festool Vecturo head to head against a cordless Makita, it was embarrassing how slow the Makita was in comparison. I think the owner committed hara-kiri.