ChuckM said:One furniture maker featured in a Fine Woodworking article uses a combination of materials to make tenons for miters (after they're milled with the Domino Joiner).
Cheese said:[
Interesting Chuck...I've used this method before for both aesthetics and to prevent the miters from opening.
ChuckM said:What was used to cut the slots on the frame?
Cheese said:Interesting Chuck...I've used this method before for both aesthetics and to prevent the miters from opening.
ChuckM said:Cheese said:FWIW...just to expand the consciousness of this forum, Domino's can be fabricated from various materials. They don't need to be fabricated from wood exclusively.
Snip.
The Domino machine can even be used to cut non-wood materials such as granite (?) countertops.
Sparktrician said:Cheese[/member], have you ever used a lock domino setup to prevent miters from opening up? It has worked very well for me in cabinet doors as well as in screen doors.
Joe Felchlin said:Re -
Making Dominoes - Glad that it “works” for you.
$68 for the molder knives sounds pretty reasonable.
But... I’m guessing that most of us woodworkers -
Don’t have a $2,795 William Hussey Molder.
Early on - More than once - I bought some 2” Beech wood -
And “sliced” it - And “diced” it into Dominoes -
With my: Table saw, router, and band saw -
With very acceptable resulting Dominoes.
But...
Given the COST per Domino - And the TIME involved - I quickly realized that -
I’d rather just buy ‘em - And spend my time actually WOODWORKING.
To each their own.![]()
T. Ernsberger said:William Husseys can be bought used for a $400-600. The parts are still available for older machines.
squall_line said:T. Ernsberger said:William Husseys can be bought used for a $400-600. The parts are still available for older machines.
I'm not being snarky when I ask this, but I'm always trying to figure out where people find the deals that they talk about on here.
The MFT/3s for $150, the CXSs at a thrift store for $12, the pneumatic pocket-holer for $500, the $5,000 jointer/planer for $250 at an estate sale...
I see people mention Craigslist, occasionally eBay, and often times "I happened to find".
When I get on Craigslist, I get nothing for Festool. Facebook Marketplace occasionally has what looks to be a bunch of stolen tools at an insane price or tools that are completely beat up for almost full retail. Or there are Systainer bundles that disappear within 5 minutes of being posted (not that I'm bitter about those, at all... not me...). eBay is the land where DF500s and DF700s are listed Buy it Now for $200 over retail and other tools auction out within 90% of retail...
Is it because I'm only in a smallish blue-collar metro area? Do these deals come up in larger metros all the time?
Svar said:Even if shaper was bought at full price, it's peanuts if you make living from carpentry and molding. It's not like OP bought it just for making dominos.
Good job turning scraps into useful product in a cost effective manner.
squall_line said:I'm not being snarky when I ask this, but I'm always trying to figure out where people find the deals that they talk about on here.
The MFT/3s for $150, the CXSs at a thrift store for $12, the pneumatic pocket-holer for $500, the $5,000 jointer/planer for $250 at an estate sale...
I see people mention Craigslist, occasionally eBay, and often times "I happened to find".
When I get on Craigslist, I get nothing for Festool. Facebook Marketplace occasionally has what looks to be a bunch of stolen tools at an insane price or tools that are completely beat up for almost full retail. Or there are Systainer bundles that disappear within 5 minutes of being posted (not that I'm bitter about those, at all... not me...). eBay is the land where DF500s and DF700s are listed Buy it Now for $200 over retail and other tools auction out within 90% of retail...
Is it because I'm only in a smallish blue-collar metro area? Do these deals come up in larger metros all the time?
Cheese said:Sparktrician said:Cheese[/member], have you ever used a lock domino setup to prevent miters from opening up? It has worked very well for me in cabinet doors as well as in screen doors.
No Sparky [member=7493]Sparktrician[/member] ...I haven't, but that's a great idea. Any photos for the visually challenged? [smile]