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Tinker:
The Makita is an OK machine and you can get close to a line fairly quickly. You can set it to a fine cut maybe a 64th or so but it really does snipe when set deeper than that. It's a bit like using an over powered car without rack and pinion steering, it torques all over the place. There really is no lateral blade adjustment so using it for jointing would be a waste of time but then again it is not meant to be a finish or smoothing plane. I find a power planner easier to use than a hand plane on hollow core doors because of the difference in density between the skin (mdf) and the (pine) stiles of the hollow doors. I do finish a hollow door with a hand plane, but hey that's just me. I use a hand plane to fit solid doors and if I have to trim the bottom I use a TS55 and a rail. Works like a charm. The hardest part is getting those big solid doors off hinges and onto my table without killing myself.
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Tom, When I first started my masonry biz way back in the dinasaur age, one of my first clients was a spec builder who was building maybe a dozen houses per year. I was doing his foundations, concrete floors and fireplaces and chimneys. His carpentry crew were a bunch of Sweedes. A rough bunch in many ways. The foreman did all of the doors. His tools of choice were his Sandvick handsaw for cutting the top & bottom. In those days, Sandvick was the saw of choice for many carpenters as they held their tooth edge much better than any of the other saws. I still have an old Sandy cross cut that I still use once in a while. The surprising tool that he use for trimming the sides of the doors was a hatchet. I don't know how many doors he would hang in a day, but I remember I had never seen anybody else hang them as quickly as he was doing them. He could get those doors amazingly smooth with that hatchet. Years later, I had occasion to work on several of those houses as owners had gotten to point of remodeling, or just plain ripping down and building anew. I pointed out to several that their doors had been fitted with a hatchet and they would not believe me. With casual inspection, it was not noticeable. One had to look real close to see they had not been treated to an LN or a Stanley. The edges were not perfect, but one had to look very close to see and roughness or undulations. There was never any splintering.
I had always thought his work was unique to only him, but I have since talked with some of my "old timer" friends who told me they had witnessed the same type of work in their past.
Tinker