Festool and mafell

Timtool said:
[member=66154]Steven Owen[/member]
I find their doweller magnificent, but in the same time I hate dowels. Gluing them is time consuming and messy when compared to dominos.
Plus the domino is more versatile, I use mine for solid wood nearly exclusively but can always use it when needed on plywood, where I generally prefer dado joints. The doweller is really only useful on sheet goods, and even then it's not really a production tool. So I don't really know what to think of it, I'd like to have one just to admire it, but wouldn't know what the heck to do with it.

Have you ever used one? I seriously doubt it. The Duo Doweler does everything the Domino plus some and works perfectly as a production tool with or without the template system. I have used both extensively having had a Domino for many years before buying a Duo Doweler. The dowels work just fine and gluing is easy with the provided glue bottle. BTW it also works on non-sheet goods including composite materials. You might try looking at view of the videos that are readily available on youTube.
 
Cheese said:
Steven Owen said:
Their template system makes plywood jointing look effortless and much easier than the Domino.

Just curious...have you used a Domino before?

Make a mark...choose a bit...plunge. Biscuits, Domino’s or dowels. The process is the same, however the outcome may be different.

No reason to get into the comparison process of the different joining techniques and their strengths. It's a dead end road with no clear winner.
 
I have not used a „dual doweler“ yet, but have used round dowels for years. The one thing that makes the Domino a winner for me is that, having only one „dowel“ (minimal space required) you already get a rotation free connection. Not achievable with a single round dowel...

YMMV.
 
What's the smallest diameter dowel the dual doweller uses?  I used the Domino to strengthen a miter in my kitchen bench seat, 10 feet long.  With the domino, it was easy.  With dowels, I am not even sure there's dowels small enough diameter to do the job (the material was 18mm), and it would take at least 2x the dowels to do it.  The rectangular cross section of the domino was perfect for this.
 
JimH2 said:
No reason to get into the comparison process of the different joining techniques and their strengths. It's a dead end road with no clear winner.

That’s the reason I didn’t go there. It all depends upon what you want for a final solution.
 
JimH2 said:
Timtool said:
[member=66154]Steven Owen[/member]
I find their doweller magnificent, but in the same time I hate dowels. Gluing them is time consuming and messy when compared to dominos.
Plus the domino is more versatile, I use mine for solid wood nearly exclusively but can always use it when needed on plywood, where I generally prefer dado joints. The doweller is really only useful on sheet goods, and even then it's not really a production tool. So I don't really know what to think of it, I'd like to have one just to admire it, but wouldn't know what the heck to do with it.

Have you ever used one? I seriously doubt it. The Duo Doweler does everything the Domino plus some and works perfectly as a production tool with or without the template system. I have used both extensively having had a Domino for many years before buying a Duo Doweler. The dowels work just fine and gluing is easy with the provided glue bottle. BTW it also works on non-sheet goods including composite materials. You might try looking at view of the videos that are readily available on youTube.

No, Mafell’s aren’t readily available in Canada unless you know some one who owns one.

I’ve used the Triton doweller during some weekend and night classes at NAIT.  I have a good idea how the doweller can work.  Granted the Triton was largely inferior to the Mafell and Freud.

The projects dictate the tool.  Chairs and benches require jointing stock that isn’t wide enough for the doweller.  The DF 700 is a better fit for narrow stock.

 
Not sure how the tuition is inferior. After using both, can you elaborate?

The domino 500 may be even better for narrower stock than the 700?
 
I will weigh in on the Domino and Mafell Duo-doweler since I have them and use them all. 
1) Doweling is much faster and much more precise than the domino.  Plunging of doweler works best when done as fast as possible where the domino is a slow and steady plunge for best results.
2) Gluing dowels is much less time intensive than gluing dominos and there are actually commercially available dowel glue dispensers that don't exist for the domino.
3) Dowels are much less expensive than dominos until the size gets beyond 12mm. 
4) The doweler is better suited for sheet goods than the domino. 
5) The doweler also works well on furniture as long as the width of the workpiece is 2" or wider. 
6) For narrower, stock the domino is the better choice. 
7) The doweler is limited to 40mm depth, the domino 500 is limited to 28mm deep while the domino 700 is limited to 70mm. 
8) For large and deep connections, the domino 700 is the better choice.
9) You can get away with using larger dowels than you can dominos in the same thickness stock.

The Hoffman PDS32 doweler is no longer available and was re-badged and manufactured by Mafell.  Too bad it is no longer marketed since it was much less expensive than the Mafell offerings for the identical machine. 

I recently did a series of videos on duo dowelers.  To get an idea of speed, this is demonstrated in the following video starting shortly after the 12 minute mark. 

Duo Doweler
 
amt said:
What's the smallest diameter dowel the dual doweller uses?  I used the Domino to strengthen a miter in my kitchen bench seat, 10 feet long.  With the domino, it was easy.  With dowels, I am not even sure there's dowels small enough diameter to do the job (the material was 18mm), and it would take at least 2x the dowels to do it.  The rectangular cross section of the domino was perfect for this.
There are two models. 700W with 3 to 12 mm cutters, and 1000W with 5 to 16 mm.  Although you can fit 3 mm on a 1000W model (same thread). So yes, greater range than Domino.
Regardless, Doweler vs Domino is a spoon vs fork argument.
 
The smallest size is 3mm but Mafell does not recommend with the DD40P as the speed is too slow.  The 3mm bit is suitable for the DD40G. The smallest I have used is 5mm and it works great.  The largest I have used is 12mm.  I will not go to 16mm dowels as the bits are over $100 each and that size dowel is very expensive (more expensive than 14mm dominos).

On the Triton; my only advice is caveat emptor.  The Triton could not do accurate joinery.  For me, the Triton is absolutely the worst power tool purchase I have made in the past 45 years and that includes a lot of tools. 
 
Svar said:
Holmz said:
Not sure how the tuition is inferior.
This is how:
...

Build quality basically

That is more along the line of testimony, which is not as good as evidence, but it is better than a statement of fact without any supporting stuff.
 
Holmz said:
Not sure how the tuition is inferior. After using both, can you elaborate?

The domino 500 may be even better for narrower stock than the 700?

The Triton was not very accurate.  You would always do a test cut and use a shim to center it.  The Triton had terrible alignment.  I brought my Jessem Dowel Jig to class the next day because it was that bad.
 
JimH2 said:
Have you ever used one? I seriously doubt it. The Duo Doweler does everything the Domino plus some and works perfectly as a production tool with or without the template system. I have used both extensively having had a Domino for many years before buying a Duo Doweler. The dowels work just fine and gluing is easy with the provided glue bottle. BTW it also works on non-sheet goods including composite materials. You might try looking at view of the videos that are readily available on youTube.

I work with solid wood mostly so the vast majority of joints I make fall outside of the DD's possibilities, mainly due to the stock not being wide enough. And when it's wide enough then I would never use dowels any way, but an actual custom width mortice made with either domino. Because solid wood rails that are wide enough for the DD usually have to support great tensions.

What I mean with it not being a production tool, is that a business cannot seriously rely on the DD as the main means of joining panels. I can see it being used for the smaller scale project, or for a starting business. But for those I would still advise the much more versatile domino. But I join all my production cabinets with dado type joints, I seriously can't afford to spend a crazy amount of time joining each part with a hand tool. To on top of that end up with a result that can support far lesser stress. That makes no economical sense.
Now if I'd make particle board kitchen cabinets all day, then I'd love to have one just in case. But again, never as a main production tool.

As I said it's a great tool, but with non negligible application limits. For that price I would rather invest in a Lamello zeta.
 
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