paulhtremblay said:
I know this forum is the best place for objective advice.
Kidding aside, in the not too far future I may purchase a hand planer. I will use it for small things, like fitting the back into a cabinet, planing flat Miller (through) dowels, flattening edge trip around plywood panels, installing doors in my house. Eventually I will make a plywood table, made my gluing a bazillion pieces of plywood on face so that the edges form the top of the table. I will definitely have to plane this flat.
Normally I do not mind paying extra for a Festool, but the Festool 850 planer is literally 4 times as much as the non Festool top of the line planer, a Bosch. $600 is so much for a tool I will use only occasionally. The Bosch gets mostly 5 star reviews on Amazon, except for the 1 star reviews, which all have the same complaint: the sole plates of the Bosh do not sit flat and produce an uneven cut.
If the price between the two tools were even close (say that the Festool were only twice the price of the Bosch), I would certainly pick the Festool.
Anyone have experience using one or both of these tools?
Hand-held planers are in general a pretty rough & crude tool. They're more the province of carpenters (first & second fix, kitchen fitters etc.) than cabinet makers, which is what you (as per above) appear to wish to do. For accurately gauged rebates, you'll be much more successful with a guided router, for planing end-grain composite blocks a belt sander is the obvious tool. Just as with any type of planer (manual or electric), the blade will rip the living daylights out of any end grain.
I've had a few planers over the years. The HL 850 E is good, but is really big for the size of cut, and the ergonomic layout of the tool demands a two-handed grip, which is often inconvenient. Better in my opinion are smaller alternatives, such as the baby Makitas or (my personal favourite) Metabo's HoE 0983, which is an electronically controlled one-handed compact & lightweight tool which when coupled with a more powerful motor can accomplish much more, more conveniently & safely.
My best planers of all are the AEG/Atlas Copco family, now unfortunately long discontinued. Whilst bigger than the Metabo they're still smaller & lighter than the big Festo/ol. The killer features of these tools are twofold: firstly, an all-encompassing retractable cutterhead guard makes them the safest planer I've ever used, and the cut width of a full 4" with disposable TCT blades makes for unprecedented safety & usefulness. As good as the Festo/ols may be, with their much more "gentle" slicing cuts, they don't even approach the AEG's levels of safety & convenience. That TCT 4" cut in particular makes a world of difference in dressing the faces of framing hardwoods.
Nevertheless, a good 1/2" router and a Bosch/Holz Her/Milwaukee/AEG/Atlas Copco/Festo Belt sander (especially when fitted with a sanding frame) will be much more useful & accurate cabinetmaking tools than any planer ever could.