JimH2 said:John's looks like a great design that could be improved if it were machined out of metal or possibly plexiglass. It could be easily manufactured at a price point that would be tough to beat for the ease of use and high quality results. Add a 5mm and template guide and you are done. An advantage to his is that it can be used after assembly with a small router should one want to add holes.
Pursuing a licensing agreement with on the small manufactures of tools might be lucrative enough to give him incentive for more ideas.
Roseland said:I've got and used the Kreg jig. A bit slow, but worked well enough until I can afford the LR32.
Andrew
Mike35x95x1 said:If you have a router you can try my jig:
https://www.festoolownersgroup.com/index.php?topic=64483
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acer66 said:Roseland said:I've got and used the Kreg jig. A bit slow, but worked well enough until I can afford the LR32.
Andrew
Same here and I would not drill every hole unless I was paid to do so.
I always skip two holes because it looks neater and really do not see the need to have that kind of adjustability in kitchen shelves.
But that might be just me of course. [tongue]
stillwaterBR said:Once you use the LR32, you will never use any other jig again. The speed and accuracy it delivers is well worth the cost if you need to drill shelf pins on a regular basis.
afish said:acer66 said:Roseland said:I've got and used the Kreg jig. A bit slow, but worked well enough until I can afford the LR32.
Andrew
Same here and I would not drill every hole unless I was paid to do so.
I always skip two holes because it looks neater and really do not see the need to have that kind of adjustability in kitchen shelves.
But that might be just me of course. [tongue]
Depends on the cabinet and use. For garage cabinets I drill every hole for the maximum amount of flexibility. Typically these are floor to ceiling so its a lot of holes too. I HATE stacking things so more shelves the better, that way I can just pull something off the shelf without effecting anything else. Kitchen cabinets for my self I would probably still do it that way because I like the flexibility and the extra holes don't bother me since I keep me doors closed 99.9% of the time and Im usually to busy looking for an item to notice the extra holes when they are open. Now if it was a glass door or open shelving then that would be a different story.
xedos said:stillwaterBR said:Once you use the LR32, you will never use any other jig again. The speed and accuracy it delivers is well worth the cost if you need to drill shelf pins on a regular basis.
Guess you've never used this then ?
https://www.timberwolftools.com/blog/post/mafell-dd40p-the-dynamic-duo-doweler/
And if you're doing this regularly, a line borer is far superior to either. Or even a line boring attachment for a hinge boring machine.
Puts LR32 to shame and in the runner up category on time.
JimH2 said:xedos said:stillwaterBR said:Once you use the LR32, you will never use any other jig again. The speed and accuracy it delivers is well worth the cost if you need to drill shelf pins on a regular basis.
Guess you've never used this then ?
https://www.timberwolftools.com/blog/post/mafell-dd40p-the-dynamic-duo-doweler/
And if you're doing this regularly, a line borer is far superior to either. Or even a line boring attachment for a hinge boring machine.
Puts LR32 to shame and in the runner up category on time.
I have one and can attest that the joining is exceptional with it and the shelf pin drilling is just a bonus. Quite pricey though and if your only use was for shelf pin drilling a line borer might be a better use. I sold my Domino once I tried out the DD40.
usernumber1 said:JimH2 said:xedos said:stillwaterBR said:Once you use the LR32, you will never use any other jig again. The speed and accuracy it delivers is well worth the cost if you need to drill shelf pins on a regular basis.
Guess you've never used this then ?
https://www.timberwolftools.com/blog/post/mafell-dd40p-the-dynamic-duo-doweler/
And if you're doing this regularly, a line borer is far superior to either. Or even a line boring attachment for a hinge boring machine.
Puts LR32 to shame and in the runner up category on time.
I have one and can attest that the joining is exceptional with it and the shelf pin drilling is just a bonus. Quite pricey though and if your only use was for shelf pin drilling a line borer might be a better use. I sold my Domino once I tried out the DD40.
I'm curious if you used the domino for board or panel glue ups for lining up. Do you use the DD40 now?