afish said:
RussellS said:
I'm not sure "clamping system" is the correct terminology to use. It does not clamp anything. As in clamping boards together you are gluing together. Clamping takes hundreds of pounds of force. This is best described as a positioning system or holding system. Holding woodwork on top of a workbench. Positioning tools on top of a bench for usage.
I guess that depends on if "your" definition of clamping differs from Websters. However pneumatic cylinders can supply significant clamping pressure. A cylinder with a 2.5"bore is 4.9sq" x 150psi = 735pounds of clamping force. my comment was regarding using a MFT for clamping which is perfectly capable of applying clamping pressure even festool sells "clamping elements"
The Rockler clamping system seems to use 0.25" bores. Cylinders. NOT 2.5". Which will equal 29 pounds of clamping force using your 150 psi. So holding, positioning seems appropriate.
As for the MFT Clamping Elements MFT-SP, they have a 1/4" rod with a handle used to apply the pressure. One man grabbing the handle with his whole hand and using the leverage of the handle and throwing his whole 200 pound body backwards, can probably get a few hundred pounds of force onto the clamp. Force = mass * acceleration. Mass is the 200 pound man. Acceleration is however fast he can pull his hand against the handle of the clamp. Not sure how to measure that. How fast can you pull your hand and body backwards? One tenth of a second? Two tenths of a second? But I'm not sure the MFT Clamping Elements is designed for clamping. Like a Bessey K Body clamp or a Pony pipe clamp. And looking at the Festool MFT webpages, there is no clamping going on. It is all holding and positioning of objects on top of the table with the MFT Clamping Elements. So you can cut them or sand them.