if you could domino a series of those together
cliffp said:if you could domino a series of those together
I would have thought it would be difficult to join several pieces of wood together with sufficient accuracy that the matrix of holes had the alignment necessary to use the Parf dogs and obtain square cuts.
jamanjeval said:To me, the MFT top looks like a laminate with HDF on the top and bottom and MDF in the middle.
That is why I'm concerned: it goes in and out of the van when we work and is exposed to whatever the weather is. (the lasts time my Festools saw home was when UPS delivered them) With the exceedingly small amount of moisture it took to raise the grain on the top, it would become almost unusable if it were caught in a heavy rain while carrying it; even if I wiped it off as soon as I got it in.grbmds said:It's hard to believe that the MFT top doesn't get more "use" or "abuse" on the job site than it does sitting in a workshop.
jamanjeval said:That is why I'm concerned: it goes in and out of the van when we work and is exposed to whatever the weather is. (the lasts time my Festools saw home was when UPS delivered them) With the exceedingly small amount of moisture it took to raise the grain on the top, it would become almost unusable if it were caught in a heavy rain while carrying it; even if I wiped it off as soon as I got it in.grbmds said:It's hard to believe that the MFT top doesn't get more "use" or "abuse" on the job site than it does sitting in a workshop.
Sanding doesn't work so well for this material because unlike solid wood, it swells and becomes soft like cardboard when it gets wet. Maybe that Emmet's good stuff will solid it up a bit.
I hope whatever you had surgery on, the problem is now fixed. Houses are easy to fix. Bodies, not so much.