Brice Burrell
Member
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2007
- Messages
- 7,385
Thanks Tom, I think the super jig is going to have a real impact on the dovetail jig market.
mntbighker said:What is the party line on the DT jig vs systems like Incra that claim "who needs a dovetail jig with this kind of accuracy?" For the record the Leigh stuff looks very impressive to me but I have never used a dovetail jig. It's interesting that they seem to be one of the only companies using 8mm bits. And they show Festool routers in their ads so they must be doing something right
--Mark
Lou Miller said:mntbighker said:What is the party line on the DT jig vs systems like Incra that claim "who needs a dovetail jig with this kind of accuracy?" For the record the Leigh stuff looks very impressive to me but I have never used a dovetail jig. It's interesting that they seem to be one of the only companies using 8mm bits. And they show Festool routers in their ads so they must be doing something right
--Mark
I think everyone is different in this area, you have to find what works best for you. I personally have a Jointech fence (same basic thing as the Incra) and I also have a Leigh jig. The Leigh basically just collects dust sitting on a shelf because I don't use it (one of these days I'll probably sell it). I do quite a bit of dovetailed drawers and do them all on my Jointech. Just me personally, but the Leigh, while a very nice tool, can't even come close to the Jointech in terms of speed. I'll typically clamp about 18 parts together and batch cut them all at once. There's absolutely no difference in terms of how well the joints fit between the two systems. I even do variable spaced DTs on my Jointech. Even an operation like that is much faster in my experience. Now maybe others have found ways to speed things up with the Leigh, but I sure haven't. I've done over 100 dovetailed drawers in one day on my Jointech without even breaking a sweat.
There are plenty of options out there that work quite well. I've found what works best for me. Your experience, and everyone else's, might be totally different from that of my own though.
Dave Ronyak said:Lou Miller said:mntbighker said:What is the party line on the DT jig vs systems like Incra that claim "who needs a dovetail jig with this kind of accuracy?" For the record the Leigh stuff looks very impressive to me but I have never used a dovetail jig. It's interesting that they seem to be one of the only companies using 8mm bits. And they show Festool routers in their ads so they must be doing something right
--Mark
I think everyone is different in this area, you have to find what works best for you. I personally have a Jointech fence (same basic thing as the Incra) and I also have a Leigh jig. The Leigh basically just collects dust sitting on a shelf because I don't use it (one of these days I'll probably sell it). I do quite a bit of dovetailed drawers and do them all on my Jointech. Just me personally, but the Leigh, while a very nice tool, can't even come close to the Jointech in terms of speed. I'll typically clamp about 18 parts together and batch cut them all at once. There's absolutely no difference in terms of how well the joints fit between the two systems. I even do variable spaced DTs on my Jointech. Even an operation like that is much faster in my experience. Now maybe others have found ways to speed things up with the Leigh, but I sure haven't. I've done over 100 dovetailed drawers in one day on my Jointech without even breaking a sweat.
There are plenty of options out there that work quite well. I've found what works best for me. Your experience, and everyone else's, might be totally different from that of my own though.
Lou,
I am somewhat surprised at the speed of dovetailing that you stated. When using the JoinTech to cut the tails (sides of drawers) of dovetails, I understand how you can stack a lot of (identically sized) drawer sides together and cut them at once. But don't you have to process the (half-blind) pins of the drawer fronts and backs one pin cut at a time? In my understanding, that means you have to pickup each drawer front and drawer back and machine one blind pin (female of the half-blind dovetail joint) at a time (you can rotate the front or back and machine one pin on each end for each JoinTech fence position setting), and you have to accurately adjust the JoinTech fence for each successive pin/tail position. In contrast, with a dedicated dovetail jig, you can machine one corner of the drawer at a time -- the one edge of the front (or back) and the corresponding end of one of the sides. Four times mounting of the boards in the jig and you are done. And if you have a pair of routers, you can equip one with a straight bit to remove most of the material which puts less load on the other router equipped with the dovetail bit and presumably reduces tearout.
When making dovetails using the JoinTech setup, do you first remove most of the material between the tails using a straight bit, then recut them using the dovetail bit?
I have a JoinTech setup on my TS, and my experience when trying to cut dovetails and lock joints has been mostly frustration, possibly due to JoinTech's 17x27 inch table being anything but flat despite my trying to coax it to be flat for nearly one year. I have not had similar problems using my inexpensive (plastic) Craftsman jig or my TrendLines knock-off of a PC jig.
Dave R.