ChuckS said:If I understand the CMT jig correctly from the video, one needs to drill center holes on the partition (on three edges, endgrain) with a drill centering jig, locate and mark the center lines on the sides (carcase), and clamp CMT jig in position and drill holes.
With the Domino machine, only one positioning is needed: Clamp where you want the partition to be on the side, and mortise both the partition and side with the same machine setting. That's it. No jigs needed. Plus, easy peasy on angled dividers, even narrow ones, because you don't need to reference against any edges:
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Packard said:Snip.
The steps are essentially the same.
Snip.
Are you referring to the ability to register (paddles and cross stops)? Many doweling jigs have that feature. Dowelmax is very efficient in that regard. Completing joint as on the picture would be a breeze.ChuckS said:One often overlooked feature of the Domino machine is its math-free ability to do partitions and dividers so efficiently. Imagine doing dowels or using some kind of a router jig to complete the joint on these three sides in the exact position as desired:
I was referring to the Domino machine's ability to mill mating mortises on a divider or board AND on the carcase with ease in one single procedure. One machine and no jigs or accessory needed. The operation is done on the two mating pieces in the same setting.Svar said:Are you referring to the ability to register (paddles and cross stops)? Many doweling jigs have that feature. Dowelmax is very efficient in that regard. Completing joint as on the picture would be a breeze.
Lot's of doweling jigs do that too. Milescraft, as already mentioned, Jessem, plenty of others. It's actually better in some way, since you register directly from the mating hole/dowel, not from the edge or pencil mark. Overall not as fast as Domino, because of clamping/unclamping, but close.ChuckS said:I was referring to the Domino machine's ability to mill mating mortises on a divider or board AND on the carcase with ease in one single procedure. One machine and no jigs or accessory needed. The operation is done on the two mating pieces in the same setting.Svar said:Are you referring to the ability to register (paddles and cross stops)? Many doweling jigs have that feature. Dowelmax is very efficient in that regard. Completing joint as on the picture would be a breeze.
Packard said:My only point was that Domino does not have ownership on that technique. Snip
Yes, the dowel machine we use will drill, glue, and insert the dowels so fast that you can barely see it happen. It is however a one-trick-pony. It only does the edge part and you could buy dozens of Domino machines for what it costs. It is lightening fast and anyone can do it. Scan a sticker, push the part against the stops, push the button, done. If you have a lot of identical parts, you can skip the scanning step after the first one.Packard said:My only point was that Domino does not have ownership on that technique.
If you like dowels, then it is available in that system.
For narrow planks, the Domino is probably faster than the CMT. But on wide planks, (20" or more), I think the CMT system is quicker.
If you plan on going into production, then dowels are going to be faster because automation exists for dowels.
Crazyraceguy said:Snip.
The Domino is a fantastic machine, I use mine a lot, but as a home/hobby woodworker it would take a lot to justify its cost.
Crazyraceguy said:My point was that the main advantage of the Domino machine itself is the speed/simplicity of it, which makes sense in a commercial environment. As has been demonstrated many times, there are plenty of other ways to accomplish the same type of joinery with router jigs. So, a guy in his home shop might want to go that way. Then again are the ones with limited time in the shop, the speed factor would appeal to that type of woodworker. They can get more done on a project, rather than building jigs.
It's all about what you are doing in the shop, how often you would need it, and of course financial constraints.
I'm sure that there are people out there who could really benefit from having one, but can't or just won't buy one. I would bet the reverse is true too.