Any one have any experience with this planer. Or any of the upper end shopfox gear. Is it suited for a 1-3 man business
Greg
Any one have any experience with this planer. Or any of the upper end shopfox gear. Is it suited for a 1-3 man business
Greg
I have a Shop Fox 26" dual drum sander and a 3hp Shop Fox shaper. FWIW, they are of good quality and on par with imported machines. I have a two man stair and railing shop and these items are used lightly for a pro shop but they have never disapointed me.
Richard
Richard,
Could you tell me more about your experiences with the dual 24 in Sander. I am thinking about picking one up.
Greg
I have found that it is a very powerful and useful addition to my shop. It if far above any of the open ended type sanders, like the Detla, which was a toy. The fact that I could never justify the cost of a wide belt sander made the Shop Fox a great addition to my shop. It does require a fair amount of dust collection to remove all the dust it can generate.
Richard
I have that planer. Have had it for about 6 months and it has worked well.
rick
There are two theories to arguing with a woman... neither works.
I have that planer as well - for about 18 months now. I got it because at the time, only it and the Powermatic had 5 HP motor. It is doing fine for me running an hour or two a day. I put a Shelix head in last summer - a nice upgrade. Before that I ran 18N knives with a back bevel with good results, they just didn't hold up to high silica woods. The thermal overload trips on me if I push it too hard.
JR
I have the ShopFox 3HP shaper and the spindle sander, and am very pleased with both.
Gary
JR and Rick,
I found one at a local shop and they want around 2k for it. I have seen it on the net for as low as 1340.00 What would you consider a fair price for this machine new.
JR,
How much did your new cutter head cost
Greg
I think I paid just over $1500 for the base machine locally, and about $1100 for the cutterhead. After I bought the cutterhead from Byrd, I saw that Sunhill offers it along with a new gear box for about the same price. Grizzly now has them as well.
JR
Greg, the Wilke Yorkcraft 20" planer looks identical to the ShopFox, and the Yorkcraft costs $1299. I would bet a cup of coffee that both machines come from the same plant with different name plates.
Best Regards, Ken
We've had the shopfox 20" planer for about six months now. We are a 4 person shop and it gets a fair bit of use. We did have some problems initially with the fan falling off the motor, but at this point it seems to have been solved. [they sent me a new motor]
Jim and all who own this planer or other shopfox gear,
How is the quality of the cut from this planer. Would you recommend buying it again?
Greg H
The quality of the cut has been good. It required very little adjustment when I got it, and I haven't had any problems with sniping or the like. One thing that surprised me was that we can run several narrow boards through it at once, that I didn't think was possible with a solid, [non-segmented] infeed roller. I would buy it again, though I can't comment on it's long term durablity.
You would lose that bet! I'll go pour myself some coffee now.Originally Posted by Ken Garlock
I'm in the Grizzly showroom a couple times a month getting misc. supplies. Seems like over the last 5 years in particular the quality and innovation has been improving. I got the Shop Fox over the Grizzly because at the time, the Griz. had a 3 HP motor. Not an issue today.
Adjustments, etc. are fine on these 4-post planers. You can vary roller pressure and height, chipbreaker height (and pressure if you tweak the springs), pressure bar height (ditto pressure), and bed roller height (but this is not super convenient and I use an aux table to aviod bed rollers altogether). An idicator gauge (shop made or bought) that rides on the cutterhead works great for knife setting. Just do one knife at a time, keeping the others tight so the cutterhead tension is uniform.
Since the feed roller has spring pressure on both sides, you can feed more than one piece if you space them apart. Just be careful if they are different thicknesses!
JR