Anyone havery a drum sander they like?
I went to buy a used one today I bought on ebay. The guy had a week and a half to get it working before pickup and I went today to check it out and it had a bunch of problems. The motor wasnt powering on for the drum. We fixed that. Then the table wasn't raising or lowering and we disassembled it and tried to fix that a few gears were toast so the crank would not work. After breaking it down it had a good amount of rust on it so I decided to pass on it. At $450 if it worked it wasn't too bad of a price.
I have a few projects coming up that could use the aid of a drum sander. My dad wants an island and I need to build a few cabinets. I have a friend that wants some wine and cheese trays too. I don't want to spend $1400 on a new one though that's for sure.
I have a planer 13" delta I've been using for most stuff but once it's glued up most things don't fit width wise.
Any advise or suggestions on good sanders or options?
Comments
http://www.thewoodwhisperer.com/viewer-projects/homemade-36-drum-sander/
My math says he makes about $250 per Saturday, which isn't bad either.
We lost an awesome pension but got a pay increase at the last contract. It doubled our responsibilities so really it wasn't worth the trade off. Kind of odd to have a union with shared work agreements with other locals. Never have I saw such a thing atleast here in Chicago.
The RO-150 is awesome, start to finish sanding, and with a hard pad you can get razor sharp edges.
The hand planes can get addictive.
I did a 40 x 60 walnut table top for a friend not too long ago. We got some (heavy cut) 4/4 rough sawn walnut and I planed it to about 7/8". Then I biscuit joined the planks together... and the next part is where the Festool really shines. With everything joined together (and after I used the track saw to square all the ends and sides), I then start heavy sanding the table top with 80 grit using the hard pad on the sander. After that I heavy sand with 150, then switch the sander to finish mode and sand some more with 150. Then I sand with 220 in finish mode, then finish it with 320. Table top was absolutely beautiful and smooth as a baby's bottom. And in addition to that, there was no dust.
I can see where hand planes would be addictive... but it seems like smoothing an entire table top would take a lot of unnecessary time when you could just sand it. (This is also assuming you don't have any crazy edges to knock down where the boards were all joined together.) But... I don't have any experience with hand planes, so I'd love to know if I'm missing something . I'd like to get some hand planes for doing edge details, like round overs and whatnot. A lot less likely to ruin your workpiece with hand planes than with a router.
And based on that... since I know Mike already has a 16" planer... IMO, he'd get more use out of having a RO-150 sander with a dust collector that he would from a drum sander. My $0.02, FWIW.
OR a large wide one like this http://www.grizzly.com/products/Edge-Sander-w-Wrap-Around-Table/G0512?utm_campaign=zPage
This seems like a good idea for a flat top one.
http://www.stumpynubs.com/drum-sander.html
http://www.grizzly.com/products/37-Wide-Belt-Sander/G0539?utm_campaign=zPage
The hand planes just seem to be faster to a flatter surface, but then I've not used the Festool.