Guy Ashley said:I think there was a thread about this last year, maybe 18 months ago.
I have the Leigh and it is the versatility that wins for me.
There are other jigs that may suit you and they were discussed as well in that thread.
I cant find it on a cursory search but it is out there somewhere!! ???
Kev said:Those dovetails in your avatar picture are the exact reason I'm seriously considering the Leigh myself.
Kev said:Guy Ashley said:I think there was a thread about this last year, maybe 18 months ago.
I have the Leigh and it is the versatility that wins for me.
There are other jigs that may suit you and they were discussed as well in that thread.
I cant find it on a cursory search but it is out there somewhere!! ???
Those dovetails in your avatar picture are the exact reason I'm seriously considering the Leigh myself.
Neill said:I have had the Leigh D4R for about 13 years and I find that it still works great.
Guy Ashley said:Kev said:Guy Ashley said:I think there was a thread about this last year, maybe 18 months ago.
I have the Leigh and it is the versatility that wins for me.
There are other jigs that may suit you and they were discussed as well in that thread.
I cant find it on a cursory search but it is out there somewhere!! ???
Those dovetails in your avatar picture are the exact reason I'm seriously considering the Leigh myself.
If that's what you want to achieve, you need a sharp marking knife, a LN Dovetail Saw and a set of Japanese Umeki Nomi Dovetail chisels! [big grin]
The backs of the drawers were done on the Leigh, so I cheated on that part!! [scared]
joraft said:Neill said:I have had the Leigh D4R for about 13 years and I find that it still works great.
After doing a lot of research I bought a D4R about six months ago. The most common complaint I saw about it was the learning curve, but I've had absolutely no problem with that.
However that could change, since it's still in the sealed box. [big grin]
RonWen said:joraft said:Neill said:I have had the Leigh D4R for about 13 years and I find that it still works great.
After doing a lot of research I bought a D4R about six months ago. The most common complaint I saw about it was the learning curve, but I've had absolutely no problem with that.
However that could change, since it's still in the sealed box. [big grin]
Ohhh John!!! It doesn't require electricity (just for the routers). [wink] It really is a simple jig to use, the instructions walk you right through to success. I didn't like changing bits back & forth so I bought two (2) Bosch routers for pins and tails.