chrisrosenb
Member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2007
- Messages
- 1,265
I have had one of the old style Dominos f
Neill said:.....I wonder if one of the reasons for the change is that the line is so hard to see unless it is pretty heavily marked. Even in bright light it is hard to see because as you bend over the machine your shadow obscures the markings.
Some time ago I had actually suggested in the "Wish List" category for a lighted Domino.
Neill
Brice Burrell said:Neill said:.....I wonder if one of the reasons for the change is that the line is so hard to see unless it is pretty heavily marked. Even in bright light it is hard to see because as you bend over the machine your shadow obscures the markings.
Some time ago I had actually suggested in the "Wish List" category for a lighted Domino.
Neill
Sounds like you need the new Festool LED headlamp.
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Brice,
I actually have one of those things thanks to Tom at Tool-Home (another gratuitous plug). Never thought of this application. Thanks for the tip.
Never mind that it makes me look like Tonto sans hair when I wear it.
Neill
Chris Rosenberger said:I use the workbench to register the height of the mortise. The old style Domino has a raised V cast just above the cutter to indicate the center of the mortise.
Rick Christopherson said:As for using the raised V, this is a cast aluminum feature, not machined. As a result, its position is not considered precise. Furthermore, it is not very sharp and is generally wider than the pencil mark to which it is being aligned. I would imagine that if you compared the alignment of your raised V with the center line of the sight gauge, they would not line up--I know that mine do not.
Tezzer said:Mine is out 0.5mm to the left of the curser line, so I compensate by placing it on the right side of the pencil line. So in effect its spot on.
But in reality, how accurate does this machine need to be?
Rick Christopherson said:Any error in the centering position is compounded, so if yours is off by 0.5mm, then the resulting misalignment between joined workpieces will be a full millimeter off. For some applications this is unimportant, but for applications where you have flushed ends, this millimeter error is way beyond what should be considered acceptable.
Chris Rosenberger said:.......I did not understand the part about having to lay out an assembly backwards.
Chris