MFT

Howard,

Based on a post by Rick Christopherson, he is working currently on the new Domino manual to be shipped April 1st.  Based on the previous well written manuals he has produced for Festool USA for the AFT 55, TS 55, & the OF 1400,  I believe you will find the manual as a great reference for the Domi.

In the interim, Bill E's online review with it's very detail photo's so give you a great walk thru of the capabilities.

jim

 
I have been useing my MFT 1080 for just about everythng that I have ever seen mentioned from production cross cutting by making full use of the width uf the table and lining up several pieces to be cut at same time, ripping, squaring of cuts, and so on.  One use i have not seen yet is flattening out warped lumber.  I have a couple of 18" x 12'  and 2 16"x12'  #2 pine that I ran across about three years ago.  I also have a piece of 15"x6' clear pine. (rescued from a demolition project, so a few nicks & scratches) All of these, being that you just don't find lumber that wide any more, have resided on my storage rack for years.  recently, I did a little rearranging and all of the above were unstacked and restacked, all of which must have upset the status quo of the moisture content and they all started to get a little curl.  I have a small "honeydoo" project for THE BOSS that will make use of the 15"x6' board.  That, having been on the top of the pile had developed a warp of nearly 1-1/2" from side to side.  I had a lot of snow plowing ahead of me, so i placed the board on my MFT and clamped it with the crown side down and clamps along each side.

My first clamps were applied thru the holes of the MFT, but as i tightened, I noticed I was pulling the mft swisscheese portion up to meet the lumber.  I undid the clamping and reset 4 clamps into the clamping channels at each end of the MFT and pulled the edges of the lumber down close to flat.  I then reset 4 more clamps thru holes along the edge of the boards and just snugged them down.  About 4 hours later, i found the clamps along the MFT top had loosened up, so i tightened them up.  This time, i was able to draw both edges of the board flat along their entire length.  That was over a week ago.  this morning, i decided to check and I went down to loosen all of the clamps.  The board is absolutely flat.  No curl whatsoever..  The table top has remained totally flat.

I will be starting work on the project later today (hopefully) and will not have to do any planing to get started.  This is important, as the boards will be too wide to run thru my 12-1/2" planer.  Any planing would have to be done with hand planes.  Eventually, the Rotex 150 will be applied, but other than that, everything will be flat enough for starting the project (A tabletop & lazy susan to mount the kitchen located TV so it can be watched from either kitchen, or living room. About 90º to 120º rotation)  I will do the ends sort of bread board style with either red oak or walnut for the ends.  Not much of the wide board pine will show, but a little.  I am mainly interresed to see how the wide board reacts with time before I start attacking the 12 foot wideboards for some future projects in mind.  The first part of the experiment, flattening a badly cupped board with the MFT, has been successful.
Tinker
 
Bob Marino said:
I think Festool (Festool USA at least) recognizes that their standard manuals leave much to be desired. That's where manuals by Rick Christopherson, Gerry Work, Bill Esposito and the slew of tutorials by John Lucas really aid the customer in getting the most from these tools.

Bob

Bob,

Is Rick Christopherson's manual going to be included with every Domino, available online for download, or what?

Thanks

Dave
 
Dave Rudy said:
Bob Marino said:
I think Festool (Festool USA at least) recognizes that their standard manuals leave much to be desired. That's where manuals by Rick Christopherson, Gerry Work, Bill Esposito and the slew of tutorials by John Lucas really aid the customer in getting the most from these tools.

Bob

Bob,

Is Rick Christopherson's manual going to be included with every Domino, available online for download, or what?

Thanks

Dave
Dave, Yes :)
 
Bob Marino said:
I think Festool (Festool USA at least) recognizes that their standard manuals leave much to be desired. That's where manuals by Rick Christopherson, Gerry Work, Bill Esposito and the slew of tutorials by John Lucas really aid the customer in getting the most from these tools.

Bob

Is their a website where one can view all of these manual?

If they aren't on this forum already I think it would be a great place to have them

Dan Clermont
 
Hello Everyone,

I personally can't imagine working without an MFT !!
I love it so much I now have 3
(all of which came from Bob Marino, thanks again Bob for the great service)
2- 1080's and 1 - 800.
I use one 1080 for all sawing exercises, the other two are joined together
for assembly.
I posted on the old group about turning one into a portable
router table. I have done that and will post pics once my camera comes back from repairs!!
So far so good, it works great and while on the jobsite I can clamp things onto the
MFT. 
As far as the angle stop moving.......I don't have an issue with that, I just use the clamp
to secure the fence.

John

 
bill-e said:
woodshopdemos said:
Kevin,
  Welcome...a good first post. I don't know if you have found it yet, but take a look at my site, woodshopdemos.com and more specifically...the Festool sub-menu there.http://www.woodshopdemos.com/men-fes.htm

A lot of the people here, look for the attractive assistants, but you will see through this and enjoy the content..
euro-216.jpg

John, wow, after all this time I just realized that they were using Festool tools! ;)

There are tools in the photos?
 
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