Just got the CT-MIDI I, CT-VA (dust seperator), and the Rotex 90 from Rockler in Buffalo and I must say my wife and I are amazing that we were sanding/stripping these old kitchen cabinets with literally no dust, no vibration, no reaching for the vac power button... Not to mention just an overall quiet work environment. Thanks again for all the great information, have a great weekend. Brian
It's about time Festool brought out a lipping plane. I bought a Virutex Lipping Plane ($AUD700) a few years ago and, after the buyers remorse subsided, I discovered how much time it saved and how many jobs I no longer screwed up. Of course I still use my Domino but now I don't have to worry so much about my inevitable close calls.
I second this. I was lucky to find a barely used Lamello Cantex for a good deal and it’s such an improvement over the flush trim bit/jig connected to a router. I’d love to see what Festool would come up with
I went through this when I borrowed my buddies Domino. Seems like a design oversight by Festool not to have more increments on that adjustment if you ask me.
question for you, if I need to be less than the 37mm is it best to utilize the scale right above the bit? I haven't seen you address this. I love the stops, but in the pieces I am working on I need it to be a lot less.
Why not just reference the plate of the domino to the height of the plywood on a flat surface to the roughly 18mm? Seems like you could cut out a few extra steps rather than shimming the plate to an offset to get you to pretty much the same place
My guess is because if your trim piece isn't perfect, or your plywood surface isn't perfect, you could have slight gaps to fill instead of sanding it down to be perfect across the joint.
Just got the CT-MIDI I, CT-VA (dust seperator), and the Rotex 90 from Rockler in Buffalo and I must say my wife and I are amazing that we were sanding/stripping these old kitchen cabinets with literally no dust, no vibration, no reaching for the vac power button... Not to mention just an overall quiet work environment. Thanks again for all the great information, have a great weekend.
Brian
It's about time Festool brought out a lipping plane. I bought a Virutex Lipping Plane ($AUD700) a few years ago and, after the buyers remorse subsided, I discovered how much time it saved and how many jobs I no longer screwed up. Of course I still use my Domino but now I don't have to worry so much about my inevitable close calls.
I second this. I was lucky to find a barely used Lamello Cantex for a good deal and it’s such an improvement over the flush trim bit/jig connected to a router. I’d love to see what Festool would come up with
Happy Friday
from Federal Way!
I went through this when I borrowed my buddies Domino. Seems like a design oversight by Festool not to have more increments on that adjustment if you ask me.
question for you, if I need to be less than the 37mm is it best to utilize the scale right above the bit? I haven't seen you address this. I love the stops, but in the pieces I am working on I need it to be a lot less.
I want to own this device but don’t know where to buy it
Missing link to lost in catalogue episode for OF 1010 edging plate, deflector and angle arm setup
Why not just reference the plate of the domino to the height of the plywood on a flat surface to the roughly 18mm? Seems like you could cut out a few extra steps rather than shimming the plate to an offset to get you to pretty much the same place
My guess is because if your trim piece isn't perfect, or your plywood surface isn't perfect, you could have slight gaps to fill instead of sanding it down to be perfect across the joint.
What’s this. A Woodpeckers shim in a Festool product promo. Lol!