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- Jul 8, 2007
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- 13,126
This plate is designed to deal with moisture swelled dominoes - not dominoes from,scratch. I’ll do a video of it in action next week but keep your sandpaper, razor knife, hand plane close at hand.
Crazyraceguy said:woodbutcherbower said:I'm personally not a Domino user, simply because I don't do enough of the type of work the machine obviously excels at. But if I ever did buy one, I'd also buy ready-made Festool dominos. This just seems like a whole bunch of goofing around with no real benefit - and to be honest, I don't have time for that.
Snip. Most people don't know that you can get them in larger quantities than the clear plastic retail boxes. They sell a "case quantity" type box that is 6 times the amount of the little retail units.
Snip.
ChuckS said:Crazyraceguy said:Snip. Most people don't know that you can get them in larger quantities than the clear plastic retail boxes. They sell a "case quantity" type box that is 6 times the amount of the little retail units.
Snip.
I found that out only after having "wasted" a lot of money on the smaller packs. I now use the plastic cases to store the tenons taken out from the bulk pack boxes.
Packard said:I don’t see why you would want to make your own dominoes. It would lose that swelling factor that makes for the really tight joints. Is it just to save money? If so, that seems like a lousy trade off. Save a little money, end up with looser joints.
xedos said:I think a LOT of people are mis-guided or just plain ol' mistaken about why dominos are so hard to "test" fit.
It's because of those knife edge ridge(s) on the thin side of the domino, not because the whole domino has bloated because of moisture absorption.
With this in mind, that trim plate becomes an over complicated solution ( or worse ) to remove those edges. A block plane, piece of sandpaper, or a belt sander if you're into a production line set up - are much better options that are faster & cheaper. And you likely already have some lying about. Let's assume for a second your dominos are fat and bloated and they've grown in thickness (not likely) but hey, I'll play along............the trim plate isn't going to shave down the two broad faces of the domino anyway. Even if it did, the effort expended would immense, and the resulting finish so horrible as to make those earlier pictures look like the work of Maloof or Krenov.
Chuck nailed it.........................."solution looking for a problem "
ChuckS said:This discussion presents itself to the potential of a possible new product: cnc milled domino caps made of common wood species that are in the exact shape of the mortises. They don't have to be in the full length of the dominoes as their use is just to cover the exposed ends.
Someone who owns an Epilog laser engraving machine may be able to do some batches to sell?
That looks interesting. I may pick one up.ChuckS said:A solution looking for a problem to solve?https://dfmtoolworks.com/products/a2-domino-trim-plate
Cheese said:While both products need to be glued in place