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 Wednesday, August 27, 2008
Bob's Bench: A Free Video, DVD and SketchUp Model
Our October issue is reaching subscribers, and should be on newsstands soon. The cover story is about my new workbench, a blend of historic designs that is an ideal work holding solution for hand and power tool woodworkers alike. I've written about it here on the blog as I designed it, and during construction. I'm happy with it-it's nice and solid and will hold just about any piece of work for any task.


I designed the bench using Google SketchUp, a 3-D modeling program that I've been using for the last year or so. The nice thing about using SketchUp is it's similarity to building something, without the dust and the noise. You can put things together, take them back apart, and quickly make changes or see what different variations will look like. My upcoming book features a lengthy section on using the program for designing cabinets and furniture, and I'll be teaching a course or two on using it effectively next year. The price is also right-it's available as a free download by clicking here.


These two images were taken from my SketchUp model of the bench. If you have SketchUp on your computer, you can download the Sketchup model of the workbench and take a closer look from any angle you want to. If you want to build a version of the bench that differs in size, you can start with my model and make whatever modifications you would like. The model is compressed as a .zip file, but it's easy to open it on almost any computer. Download the SketchUp model by clicking this link: WorkbenchModel.zip (332.76 KB)
The model is also available on Google's 3Dwarehouse. You can download it in SketchUp (.skp) format by clicking here.

We also had the video camera running during the building process, and we have an hour-long DVD available in our store. In addition to the video content, there is a printed set of construction drawings, an enhanced PDF version of the article, a PDF slide show of additional step photos, and the SketchUp model on the disk. Finally, there is a free five-minute video available showing some of the many ways to hold work on the bench. This video is available by clicking here.

If you have any questions or comments, you can post them here on the blog by clicking "comment" in the lower right, or you can send me an e-mail by clicking on my name.

--Bob Lang

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8/27/2008 4:58:14 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [18] 
 Tuesday, August 26, 2008
What's That Mean? Find out in a New Encyclopedia

What do a compass plane, a lap splice and a swaged hinge have in common? They’re all things that a woodworker has a pretty good chance of running into at some time in their woodworking career. They’re also three phrases that may be unfamilar. That’s why those phrases are three of the 1,070 entries in The Woodworker’s Illustrated Encyclopedia.

Woodworking has a language that is unique, and if you’re new to the craft (or honestly, even if you’ve been doing it for a number of years) there is terminology that will be new to you. We’ve seen only a few books that tackle the terminology of woodworking. Some have been British, and as such they had a different slant on many of the terms. And a couple cast too broad a net, covering tools and concepts well beyond woodworking. Author Graham McCulloch decided woodworkers needed an encyclopedia to help them through the language, and he also decided adding photos and illustrations to the definitions would make things even more clear. We agreed, and it’s been a fascinating process.

After compiling listings for five years, Graham started putting the definitions together and developed helpful illustrations for each. Some were easy; "hammer" has 24 illustrations. Others proved challenging; "crazing" ("a series or network of fine cracks in a varnish or lacquer finish due to age or excessive sunlight exposure. Humans wrinkle, furniture crazes") was the last definition to be illustrated. It seems crazed furniture is not a photo most woodworkers have in their portfolio.

Most of us would agree that a dictionary or encyclopedia isn’t on most people’s summer reading list (let’s face it – it’s a reference book, not literature). So Graham also worked to keep things entertaining throughout. I’m particularly fond of the "Duct Tape" entry. It traces the beginnings of this humble giant back to ancient Greece, including the autographed photo of the originator, Aristotle Duct.

If you’re new to woodworking, or if you’ve been working wood for decades, The Woodworker’s Illustrated Encyclopedia will prove invaluable, educational and entertaining. We'll announce it here when the book is available (late September) at the Popular Woodworking Shop, but in the meantime, take a look at some of our other offerings.

— David Thiel, editor, Popular Woodworking Books



8/26/2008 8:40:01 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
 Monday, August 25, 2008
September Seminar in San Diego with Bob Lang

The San Diego Fine Woodworkers Association has invited me to come out and give a three-day seminar September 12, 13 and 14. This is one of the oldest and best organized woodworking clubs in the country, well-known for their annual Design in Wood competition. These guys know how to put on an event, and I'm excited to be a part of this year's Fall Seminar. I'll be speaking and showing photos Friday night, and Saturday and Sunday I'll be building a piece of furniture.


What's unique about this event is it's location and presentation. I'll be on stage in an auditorium, along with a complete shop set-up. The audience will be in comfy, theatre-style seats watching me on stage, as well as on two large screens that will show details of what I'm doing. I'll be bringing along hand tools and jigs and you'll be able to watch the complete process of making through mortise and tenons as well as other joints and details of this Arts & Crafts style buffet.


My talk on Friday night will include some history of the Arts & Crafts movement, as well as the design process, and how I arrived at the design of this piece. I'll preview the building process and will be answering questions about my work and what we do here at Popular Woodworking. On Saturday and Sunday, the club is going all out to make this an enjoyable experience. In addition to the cushy seats and big screen video, breakfast, lunch and beverages are all included in the modest price. The club is also providing each attendee with a copy of one of my books.


We had originally intended to give everyone a copy of my new book, Drafting and Design for Woodworkers, but that title won't be available until late in October. Instead, we've decided to let those who sign up before September 1 take their pick of any of my other books. If you're planning on attending, additional titles will be available at a discounted price, and without any fees for shipping. If you've already signed up, you'll be receiving an e-mail from me directly to choose your book.

If you haven't signed up, seats are still available through the SDFWA website. Click on the link at the bottom of the page to reserve your spot. I'm looking forward to seeing you there. More information about the event is available from SDFWA, and more information about my books is available from my web site, craftsmanplans.com.

--Bob Lang

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8/25/2008 12:48:34 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [6] 
The New Powermatic 18" Band Saw: Totally Overbuilt

Every time I go to Atlanta or Las Vegas for one of the big woodworking shows, there's always one tool that makes me think about selling my plasma in order to get it into my shop. This year at the International Woodworking Fair, it was Powermatic's new 18" monster band saw.

Barry Schwaiger of Powermatic demonstrated the saw's features to us, though really the saw did all the talking.

The saw, available at the end of the year, reminds me of a lot of the old Crescent or Tannewitz band saws I've seen in professional workshops. The first thing I noticed is that everything on the saw is cast iron or steel.

"We almost had a no-plastic rule," Barry says. "Except for the switch, everywhere you touch is cold metal."

The saw has an 18" resaw capacity under its bearing-style guides, which all adjust independently (nice touch). As evidence of the stoutness of the saw, Barry dropped the blade guide al the way down to the table. Then he invited us to try to move the guides. No dice. The guides are rock solid.

The table itself is a big chunk of iron and is tilted with a rack-and-pinion mechanism (all metal, by the way). The table tilts to the left by 14° specifically to accommodate people who cut their dovetails on the band saw. And the machanism has a clever way to bypass the 0° stop for the table to make this change effortless.

The blade-tensioning system appears quite robust, with large acme-thread screws. And its quick-tensioning feature has three settings. You can release all the tension to remove the blade, keep a little tension on the blade between jobs, or fully tension the blade for work.

The saw is powered by a 5-horsepower motor (available with either a single-phase or three-phase motor), and the saw operates at two speeds. To stop the saw there is a fancy footbrake that looks like it should be on a stock car, not a band saw.

"I told my guys I wanted this to be the Harley-Davidson of band saws," Barry says. "They went a little over the top with that one."

The saw, built in Taiwan, weighs about 800 pounds. Barry says the price will be "tickling $4,000." That puts the Powermatic in the same price and specification range at Laguna's 18" Resaw Master Band Saw. And that, Barry says, is intentional.

"We're going straight after Laguna on this," Barry says.

— Christopher Schwarz

P.S. You might want to also check out the video at the top of this entry that David Thiel shot while at the show. In the interest of full disclosure, the video was sponsored by Powermatic, but it really does show off the features of the saw.


Read other entries by Christopher Schwarz
8/25/2008 11:46:19 AM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [2] 
 Friday, August 22, 2008
New Forstner Bits Defy the Laws of Physics

It’s hard to imagine that someone today could come up with a better Forstner bit – they were first patented in 1874. But today we used a new Forstner from a German company called Horst Miebach that chewed through wood like nothing I’ve ever seen.

The bit – unveiled at the International Woodworking Fair – was set to bore into the end grain of a chunk of white oak. I advanced the bit and it started throwing out shavings that looked like tiny ribbons – very unusual. Even more unusual is that as I fed the bit faster, it just kept diving into the wood. No matter how hard I tried, I couldn’t overfeed the bit.

The MaxiCut bit – sold under the Colt brand name – has several unusual features that make it work so well. Its exterior rim has been cut away to leave two saw-like teeth to score the perimeter of the hole. This, according to company officials, reduces the build-up of heat. And heat is what decreases the life of any bit.

Also, the cutting lips of the bit have grooves ground into them. These grooves, which the company calls “chipbreakers,” turn the big shavings that are typical of Forstner bits into little ribbons. These ribbons are easily extracted from the hole. This also increases the life of the bit and allow it to be fed faster into the work.

As a result of these improvements, these high-speed steel bits can last five times as long as regular bits, according to Jurgen Miebach, managing director of Horst Miebach.

Another impressive feature of the MaxiCut bit is the shank that you chuck into your drill. The shank has three slight cams ground into it. These cams lock the bit into the three jaws of your drill press’s chuck – or into the drill extension offered as an accessory. The rotation of the chuck locks the bit into place thanks to the cams.

The bits will be available in both metric and Imperial measurements in these ranges: 14mm to 55mm and 1/2” to 2-1/4”. A typical 1-3/8” bit should cost $35 – about the price of a typical premium Forstner.

Horst Miebach has been lining up U.S. distributors for the bits, which should be available in October. We’ve asked for a set to test, and we eagerly await their arrival.

— Christopher Schwarz


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8/22/2008 9:54:42 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [5] 
SawStop Unveils a Less Expensive Cabinet Saw

In a move that will surely tighten the competition in the table saw market, SawStop announced plans to introduce a less expensive version of its cabinet saw that will use the same blade-stopping technology on its industrial cabinet saw and contractor saw.

The SawStop Professional Cabinet Saw is expected to cost somewhere between $2,500 to $2,800 (without accessories) and should be available during the spring of 2009, company officials said. The company’s industrial cabinet saw costs between $2,799 and $3,899, though after Oct. 1, the price will increase to a range of $3,099 to $3,899.

The lower-priced SawStop cabinet saw will compete with other premium saws, such as the new domestically made Delta Unisaw and the Powermatic PM2000, which starts at about $2,500. Both of those saws have upgraded guards, but they do not include the blade-stopping technology of the SawStop.

SawStop showed a pre-production model of its Professional Cabinet Saw at the International Woodworking Fair in Atlanta and pointed out the changes the company made to reduce the price. The new saw uses different blade-elevation controls and does not include the nice gas shock on the industrial-level saw, which assists the user in raising the blade.

Also, there is less cast iron in the trunnion assembly, the saw has a smaller tabletop and it will be available with a 3 horsepower single-phase motor only.

The Professional Cabinet Saw includes a nice Formica-faced T-square fence system, plus all the enhanced guards and blade-stopping technology found on its other saws. The saw will weigh between 515 and 540 pounds and will be available with 52”- or 36”-long fence rails.

In addition to the Professional Cabinet Saw, SawStop showed attendees its new contractor-style saw (now available for $1,599 to $1,839) in a couple configurations and was showing photos of the minor nicks that SawStop users received when their fingers came in contact with a spinning sawblade.

Company officials say they have received reports of about 400 “saves” from users who have set off the saw’s brake cartridge since the saws went on the market three years ago. However, the company estimates that number to be about three times higher. The company encourages users to send in the spent cartridges when they touch the blade for further analysis, and they said that they will send the user a free replacement cartridge in these instances (brake cartridges cost $69 for a 10” blade and $89 for an 8” dado).

Since SawStop went on the market, the company has sold about 13,000 saws.

— Christopher Schwarz


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8/22/2008 2:00:01 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [8] 
 Thursday, August 21, 2008
New Veritas Skew Rabbet Plane In Action

Veritas is just about ready to release two new skew rabbet planes, which cut rabbets both with and across the grain. These full-featured planes are fundamental tools in the shop of a hand-tool woodworker. We take a look at this new plane, which was unveiled at IWF, and take it for a test drive.

— Christopher Schwarz


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8/21/2008 11:00:27 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [4] 
New Bits from Amana Tools

Today I received confirmation that in a woodworking class, it isn’t only the student that’s handed useful, inspiring information. We spent time this afternoon at IWF with Lonnie Bird. Most everyone knows about Mr. Bird. After nearly 30 years as a woodworker and many years as a woodworking educator and teacher, he has turned to tool design as his latest challenge. And his most recent router-bit design was spurred by a conversation with a student at his school in Dandridge, Tenn.

After building a number of projects with tambour doors and gluing the individual pieces to a canvas backing, Bird had tired of the same issues with each assembly. A student, also building a tambour door, asked if there wasn’t a better method available, maybe a way to join the pieces using no glue or backing. The proverbial light bulb went off in Bird’s mind.

The result of Bird’s design can be seen in both the completed pieces of the tambour and the finished door in the above photo (and on display at the Amana booth at IWF). Two router bits are used to create a joint that slips together to form a ball-and-socket-type joint. The use of these router bits, as explained by Bird, is to begin with stock that’s milled to 1/2" in thickness and about 2-1/2" in width. Next, cut the small ball shape into the stock. He suggests you make a single pass at the table saw to waste away some of the material before running the cut at a router table to save additional stress on the bit.

The other part of the equation is to form the twin tambours (two pieces are cut into each piece of stock) using the second router bit. Cut on both faces of the stock to form the ball portion of the joint. This setup is where you need to make sure the ball end fits smoothly into the slot, then rip the stock down the middle into two pieces.

Admittedly, the joint could be broken when pieces are simply slid in position. But, once the assembled door is installed as a unit, the possibility of breakage is nearly nil. This is an ingenious answer to an age-old problem of canvas and glue. I’ll bet Bird’s tambour doors are not going to have to be reworked after a hundred or so years of use, unlike many tambour doors.

For more on the bits, which cost about $175 for the set, visit Amana's site.

Also in the Amana booth we found another new idea in router bits. This idea is not from the design side per se, but is adapted from the industrial area. Amana has unveiled the In-Tech series of router bits with replaceable carbide insert knives. There are nine bit profiles available and each has a cutting edge that’s a piece of profiled carbide held to the body of the bit with small bolts. When the knives dull, merely install new inserts and you’ve got a bit that’s as sharp as day one.

The company says this is a significant savings for the typical woodworker and think the bits should last up to four times as long as standard brazed carbide tips. The In-Tech bits begin at $16.88 with a matching replacement knife selling at $3.08. The In-tech 1/4"-roundover bit is priced at $31.09 and the matching carbide inserts are priced at $14.92 per pair. You’ll have to make the comparison to your favorite router bits. I have a couple of these coming into the Popular Woodworking shop. I want to get a closer look and see how the bits stack up.

— Glen D. Huey


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8/21/2008 10:12:54 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
Ancient Bench Built from Modern Materials

Planemaker Gary Blum introduced a new workbench design for sale here at the International Woodworking Fair. Well, it’s not really fair to call it new. The base design is a couple hundred years old, but Blum has added Baltic Birch plywood, bronze bushings and pipe clamps to make it a thoroughly modern bench.

The bench looks like the English-style workbench immortalized in Peter Nicholson’s “Mechanic’s Companion” of the 19th century. It is essentially a torsion box on top of some stiff legs.

The top of Blum’s ingenious bench is also a torsion box made from 3/4" Baltic birch plywood throughout – the front apron is actually a sandwich of two layers of Baltic birch. Below the torsion box top is a set of red-oak legs and stretchers joined with bolts, which allow the bench to be knocked down. The legs are angled out to give the bench a firm stance.

Weighing in at about 240 pounds, the bench is 24" deep and 6' long, though Gary says he will make the bench 7' or 8' long upon request. The user also can specify the height of the bench.

The most clever aspect of the bench is how Blum incorporated Jorgensen pipe clamps into the design to work as the face vise and the end vise.

In the face-vise position, Blum built a twin-screw vise by placing two pipe clamps in bronze bushings on 18" centers. The clamps press a large removable wooden chop against the front edge of the benchtop. You might be wondering if pipe clamps have enough throw to be useful as a woodworking vise. They don’t. If you need to clamp really thick work, the pipe clamps can be slid out and locked in position to hold thick stock.

Blum put a similar clamping system on the end of the bench, but he also incorporated a dog system into the end vise so you can clamp panels to your benchtop between dogs.

The base model of the bench will cost about $995. Longer versions will cost more.

I got to work with the bench for about 15 minutes today and was very impressed. It is a solid bench, and the torsion box will ensure that the top remains rigid and flat (unless you leave your bench out in the rain).

So for those woodworkers looking for a solid English-style bench, drop Blum a line. It’s a heck of a deal at that price.

— Christopher Schwarz


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8/21/2008 9:33:56 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3] 
Getting in Touch With Our Inner Europe

I think I was in the DeWalt booth when I suddenly felt the tide turn.

One of the company’s product managers was explaining the new guard on the DeWalt jobsite table saw. It was one of the new riving-knife-based guards that all the manufacturers are installing on their machines to comply with new government standards.

“This guard is so easy to use,” the product manager says, “the user won’t have any excuse or reason not to use it.”

And with that he installed all three components of the guard on the saw in less than 17 seconds (I timed him).

When I say the tide turned at that moment, I mean that at that moment I realized how many times I had heard that same speech – and almost those same words – used by other manufacturers as they introduced their new European-style guards during the last 12 months.

Bosch, Delta, Steel City, Grizzly and Jet have all been eager to show off how easy their new guards are to use. Whereas during the last 13 years I’ve covered the industry, usually the guard was discussed like this: “And there is a clear plastic guard.”

Those old guards, which were required by government regulations, were practically useless (as we all know). And they’re rarely used. Heck most people probably couldn’t find their table saw’s guard hiding somewhere in their shop.

But now suddenly a safe saw is a selling point. Wow. That’s a big change. As I began to look around a bit, I realized that many European-style tools are now infiltrating our American shops. Don’t believe me?

In the last three years Festool has gone from being a niche toolmaker to a company that makes the tools that everyone wants to beat. The Festool Domino, a feat of European engineering, is probably the most visible evidence of this. But you also see other clues: DeWalt is introducing two plunging circular saws to compete directly with the Festool TS 55 EQ.

Last year Jet Tools introduced a new European jointer/planer – and this year is introducing another version of that machine with a helical cutterhead. SawStop has always used European guarding on its saws and has successfully used safety as a selling point – and the company just continues to expand.

Even Grizzly Industrial – long a mainstay of Taiwanese and Chinese manufacturing – has been putting down some Teutonic and Italian roots. Parts of some of Grizzly’s sliding table saws come from Germany and Italy. And right now, there are four Grizzly products that are made in Germany, including a sliding table saw and a wet sharpener. Plus the company is introducing more European-style machinery that is designed in Germany but built in China.

So what does this mean for U.S. woodworkers? Good things, for the most part. I’ve seen what Festool is planning on introducing to this country in the coming years, and a lot of it is exciting stuff. Plus, I’ve been in European workshops and can say they are safer and healthier places to work.

But the tools are more expensive (usually because of the quality). And I find that many of their machinery setups are more complex than ours (mostly because they use the guards properly).

So as the DeWalt’s new table saw guard clicked back into place onto the top of the saw I concluded a couple things: American woodworkers are due for some changes in the way we work. But I also bet that as Americans, we’ll find a way to mix the Budweiser with the Beaujolais to suit our tastes.

— Christopher Schwarz


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8/21/2008 9:09:50 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [1] 
 Wednesday, August 20, 2008
Old-School Joinery with a New Tool

Freud invited us to an early meeting to present a number of new woodworking related products. Some were router bit designs, some were geared to industrial consumers and one was a new machine designed to properly cut and position holes for dowel joinery, appropriately named a Doweling Joiner.

Dowels aren’t a new concept, but this machine is, at least to the United States market. The best way to explain this tool is to think a biscuit joiner, but for dowels. The tool operates in much the same way and is designed for many of the same uses, such as face-frame construction.

We feel this tool may have more of an impact in the kitchen cabinet area or for those building projects with adjustable shelves. The bits for this joiner are the same bits used in straight-line boring machines; they lock into the tool with set screws and are exactly 32mm or 1-1/4" apart.

Does 32mm sound familiar? That’s why we think kitchen cabinet builders might jump on this tool right away. The 32mm system is a complete European kitchen cabinet concept that’s been in this country for some time.

As for adjustable shelving, this Doweling Joiner is great for installing the 1/4" holes for shelf pins. This tool drills two holes at a time (one if you remove and work with a single drill bit) and uses two retractable pins that are fully adjustable to maintain alignment as the holes are drilled. Like with a biscuit joiner, place the base of the tool against a straight edge to keep the holes in a line.

The Doweling Joiner has a 6.5-amp motor, drills for dowels that are from 3/16" to 1/2" (5mm – 12mm) and is adjustable for depth up to 1-3/8". Look for this tool to sell for $329. We’ve been told the Doweling Joiner will be on the market very shortly. And we also noticed that Triton was showing a similar machine in its booth.

— Glen D. Huey


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8/20/2008 11:33:49 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [0] 
In the Future with Festool

Two years ago if I would have mentioned the company Festool, more likely than not, you wouldn’t have known the name. Then the Domino was introduced and the name Festool jumped in popularity. The next year the company delivered two routers, the OF2200 and the MFK 700, along with Kapex, the Festool miter saw, and the company name is now well known throughout woodworking.

Of course Festool is here at the International Woodworking Fair. The main draw in the booth is the Kapex. That saw wasn’t at the big Las Vegas show last year. There wasn’t even a prototype to look at. So, even though we’ve all heard tons of information about this miter saw, this is the first look for many woodworkers.

For those of us covering the happenings at IWF, Festool scheduled appointments that were held outside the booth in a “secret” room. I think the team at Festool had a great idea. With scheduled appointments, the team met with everyone on a one-on-one basis to show us what was waiting in the wings from Festool – what the company planned to bring to the table in the next couple years. And we get to deliver to you that look into the future.

I’ve always heard Festool talk about “the system.” I knew a router or plunge-cut saw with a multi-function table (MFT) wasn’t the system. Today the concept of system came into focus. Festool envisions woodworkers setting up complete shops with Festool tools. That’s what was displayed in the secret room.

The big concept was a Compact Module system. The table for this system attaches to an MFT by way of the v-grooves along all edges. The top of the table, where you change plates in and out, is where the action takes place.

In one module the Festool team set up a router station. Simply mount a router on the bottom of a plate, flip the plate as you place it into the table and turn a normally hand-held tool into a router table. (That’s not a new concept until you add in a number of possible modules and plates, each with different tools). You can use an OF1400 up to and including the super-sized OF2200 routers and the setup comes complete with a fully functioning fence that allows quick-action movement for positioning and then a fine-tune adjustment so you can dial in the cut exactly.

Another module in the display held a Festool TS 55 EQ plunge-cut saw. Again the saw was attached to the plate then inverted and extended through the plate to form a small table saw. Included on this table saw was a fence ready to position and lock as needed, along with a see-through guard system and of course, a riving knife (which is part of the plunge-cut saw). The look and feel was that of a table saw.

What makes both these setups so cool is a sliding table that is positioned directly beside the saw and in front of the router. These sliders fasten to the Compact Module table using v-grooves and are very smooth in operation. Now you have a setup for crosscuts or, if the sliding attachment is used at the router module, you have a great way to mill the ends for rails and much more.

I think we can look for additional modules down the road. One that is in the works, but you might not see due to Underwriters Laboratory hurdles concerning guards, is a plate holding an inverted Festool jigsaw.

Also, Festool gave us a look at a couple new tools, one of which is a vacuum-clamping system. This system has a vacuum built into a systainer and it was as quiet as a church mouse. We could talk in normal volumes and easily hear what was said as the vacuum powered up to hold firm.

Attached to the vacuum is a stand that can be clamped to an MFT or can be held to a smooth tabletop via vacuum action at the base of each pod. At the top of the pods are interchangeable hard rubber-like platforms (four designs in all) that immediately grab most any surface. We watched as a rough-sawn, straight-from-the-sawmill chunk of mahogany was grabbed strong and tight. And with a smooth surface such as a piece of melamine, the hold was incredible. So incredible that using this as a mount for edge routing would be a walk in the park. Also, the platforms can be rotated and pivoted as needed bringing to mind the possibility of holding work while carving or shaping cabriole legs.

Additionally, Festool has two new T-handle drills about to hit the scene. These drills are well-balanced and very comfortable in your hands and there are interchangeable chucks designed for a variety of duties. The first is what Festool labeled a 12 + 3, which is equal to a 10.8-volt drill, and a 15 + 3 that’s equivalent to a 14.4-volt drill. Each drill comes with a lithium-ion battery made of the highest quality (what else would you expect from Festool?) and is backwards compatible with earlier Festool batteries and chargers. Look for these drills to come to market during the second quarter of 2009.

— Glen D. Huey


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8/20/2008 11:25:03 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)  #  Comments [3]