mprzybylski said:Kriss, pardon the ignorance but is the 5mm bit used the one that comes with the LR32? If so, which one, because if I'm not mistaken it comes with two, correct?
PA floor guy said:Kriss, great video. I have to ask what everyone else is thinking. What is your background, I see you have a nice assortment of festool. How did you get into the trade. I will be using your technique very soon on a mobile wood shop I'm building.
FastEasySmartTOOL said:mprzybylski said:Kriss, pardon the ignorance but is the 5mm bit used the one that comes with the LR32? If so, which one, because if I'm not mistaken it comes with two, correct?
You are correct that the LR32 set comes with two 5mm bits. Short answer: you can use either.
I used the "V" point dowel drill bit, Festool part 491064. The "V" point is designed to reduce tearout on the reverse side, but a little tearout in this application isn't an issue at all. Technically you don't even have to go all the way through the material, only deep enough to accommodate a shelf peg.
mprzybylski said:FastEasySmartTOOL said:mprzybylski said:Kriss, pardon the ignorance but is the 5mm bit used the one that comes with the LR32? If so, which one, because if I'm not mistaken it comes with two, correct?
You are correct that the LR32 set comes with two 5mm bits. Short answer: you can use either.
I used the "V" point dowel drill bit, Festool part 491064. The "V" point is designed to reduce tearout on the reverse side, but a little tearout in this application isn't an issue at all. Technically you don't even have to go all the way through the material, only deep enough to accommodate a shelf peg.
Got it, thanks. That now begs my other question, which shelf peg is precise enough to fit into that hole and make alignment so easy?![]()
PA floor guy said:His YouTube name is rocky nine 11. Some great stuff.
Richard/RMW said:mprzybylski said:FastEasySmartTOOL said:mprzybylski said:Kriss, pardon the ignorance but is the 5mm bit used the one that comes with the LR32? If so, which one, because if I'm not mistaken it comes with two, correct?
You are correct that the LR32 set comes with two 5mm bits. Short answer: you can use either.
I used the "V" point dowel drill bit, Festool part 491064. The "V" point is designed to reduce tearout on the reverse side, but a little tearout in this application isn't an issue at all. Technically you don't even have to go all the way through the material, only deep enough to accommodate a shelf peg.
Got it, thanks. That now begs my other question, which shelf peg is precise enough to fit into that hole and make alignment so easy?![]()
You can buy precision dowel pins from McMaster, they come in many sizes including 5mm:
http://www.mcmaster.com/#standard-dowel-pins/=v2ujkh
RMW
Rusty Miller said:Thanks Richard for the link. Now my question, is the M5 dia. the 5mm and also what length would you get?
Rusty
Rusty Miller said:Kinda what I was thinking about the length. That kid definitely knows an easy way of making a top. Wonder what bit he is using for the 20mm holes. Maybe he'll chime in.
Rusty
Richard/RMW said:Rusty Miller said:Thanks Richard for the link. Now my question, is the M5 dia. the 5mm and also what length would you get?
Rusty
Hi Rusty. I think the length can vary. I assume the bottom hole is < 18mm, it looked like the top holes were plunged clear thru. Perhaps 25mm would work - maybe 15 into the bottom and 10 into the top?
RMW
BigCountry73 said:Kriss,
How would you go about making a top that is larger than the MFT and could/would you possibly do a video on that?
I know there are a lot of guys out there that make their own MFT style benches and to my knowledge there is no video on how to make the top.
Keith
FastEasySmartTOOL said:BigCountry73 said:Kriss,
How would you go about making a top that is larger than the MFT and could/would you possibly do a video on that?
I know there are a lot of guys out there that make their own MFT style benches and to my knowledge there is no video on how to make the top.
Keith
Technically, with the method I demonstrate there is no limit to the length (long side) of the new MFT top. Just use a longer piece of material, and keep shifting it over! The only limit is on the width (short side), which must fit inside the long side of an official MFT such that you can use the MFT's guide rail mechanism.
You should be able to make a pretty large top this way. Assuming the largest MDF sheet you can find is 4' x 8', you can make a top as large as 8' x ~3.25'