afish said:
I would be interested in hearing your likes/dont likes and your opinion on the "zeroness" of the joint. Would you but it again.
Likes :
Pull it out of the systainer, attach and adjust the support plate / handle, plug in the mains and airline, turn on and put in some edge band, you're ready to go in 1 minute from opening the systainer to running the first edge
Waterproof joins without the cleaning up - you can get polymer backed edge band that creates waterproof joins, for bathroom cabinets, etc., ( much like the polyurethane for the Festool, but of course you have to clean the machine through, and what happens if you get a power cut when your Conturo is full of polyurethane? )... with the Mafell you can switch from polymer to standard just by what band you put in the machine
Lack of bulk - I had a Virutex style glue machine before (they all look the same) and the glue pot is behind the machine and under the support plate - this means you need a reasonable overhang on your piece of work over the edge of the workbench to use the machine - no fun for smaller pieces. The Mafell obviously has no glue pot so the over hang required is virtually nothing. I have a couple of Vac Sys heads built into one of my work benches, set up so when horizontal they are level with the top and when vertical the hold work flush with the edge - I can literally drop even a small panel on the vac heads and edge band it. I think minimum width with my setup is about 7 or 8 cm.
Lack of maintenance - let it cool down, put it back in its case - it will be ready to go in under a minute next time you need it.
Dislikes :
Of course start with the elephant in the room - price... it's not cheap. It is beautifully engineered, and I really hope it keeps working for a long time, but in a normal world (i.e. not in a little bubble of wealthy clients) - a one man band cannot justify / afford it - a real shame as it's exactly the situation it's made for.
Edge band availability : to start with it was not easy to get hold of edge band, I can now get hold of the correctly backed edge from several suppliers. I've given up trying to get hold of edging by the metre and concentrate on a handful of edges and buy by the roll - from 50m to 150m depending on the colour. Pricing for a band in white is around 0,50€ per metre, up to 1,50€ per metre for some of the fancy '3D' design edges.
Zero edge : this is down to three things - 1) how you prepare the edge; 2) how you clean up the edge band after applying; 3) the colour you are using;
For preparing critical edges, I over size my panels by 0,5mm on all sides, then trim to size with a router. This sounds time consuming, but as with any process, once you get it down to a fine art it's very quick. Drop the panel on the vacuum pads, dedicated rail for edging ( a Virutex rail with a funky edge ), router setup for edging panels ( I use an OF1400 with a custom outrigger / stabiliser and a top bearing bit ), 0,5mm offset setup blocks, ( I make a lot of setup blocks to have exactly the same offset when I drop a rail onto work ), clamp and go. As an asides, I'll be very interested to see the cut quality of the new Festool TSV60 when I can get my hands on one, it's certainly on my radar.
For edging, one of my MFK700s is setup with the edge band base and a 2mm round over bit. I never touch the adjustment, I can pick it up and go. Run down the edge and you're done. No glue to clean up. For 0,8mm or 1mm edging, I often put on a micro bevel. I have another MFK700 setup for that; also a Mafell KF1000 set for straight cuts, but I don't use that too much - MFK700 rules for edging, no question.
Solid colours are the hardest. I've done a lot of grey anthracite which is pretty hard. Of course with a really bright light and looking for it, you can see the join... but I have cabinets I've made for my kitchen, and in day to day use, it looks like the inside of the cabinet just comes out and rolls round in to the edge.
Photos are a two edge sword - because lets say I posted a photo that gives this effect - someone will always say 'you've taken the photo so you can't see the join' which is true, because in everyday conditions you can't see the join; if I posted a photo with super bright lighting and zoomed up - someone will always say 'you spent all that money and I can see the join' which is true, because in these particular conditions you can see the join.
Would I buy again - probably... because I'm never happy unless I do the best I can do, and I don't think there is another way to do edging better (in mobile portable mode).
BAT table : this is to hold the machine for passing small (and larger) pieces over it. I don't have it, it's expensive, I want it... one day my finger will twitch on the mouse button and it will arrive a week later.