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Thread: My first taste of mustard! (Gloat)

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    396

    My first taste of mustard! (Gloat)

    Well, after being backordered for 2 months, she finally found her way here.

    This was an amazon.com special, though not the best deal they've ever offered. I got her for $268. Chisel and bit set is on its way from Lee Valley. Chisel sharpener on its way from Rockler.

    It came with only a small defect on the plastic bit rest as shown in the 3rd pic. Not a big deal from my point of view.

    I'll try to post some pics of it in action with the chisels after factory sharpening and then after I sharpen the chisels. I'm guessing there will be a good difference. We'll see.

    Anyway, this thing is a monster and it's HEAVY!

    1.jpg 2.jpg

    3.jpg

  2. #2
    Is that the 3/4 HP model? What a deal! It looks to me like you stole that baby.
    Hope you like it!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    396
    Quote Originally Posted by Craig Zettle
    Is that the 3/4 HP model? What a deal! It looks to me like you stole that baby.
    Hope you like it!
    Damn right, fully loaded 3/4 HP.

    Just learned my chisels are backordered. That's a low-blow about right now.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Gambrills, MD - Near Annapolis
    Posts
    556
    Try the Lee Valley chisels. I have the same mortiser and have considered non-powermatic chisels. I don't have them yet, but they were recommended to me here.

    Also, does your hold-down tighten down evenly? Mine pinches on one side and is loose on the other. Similarly, my two rollers that hold the work to the fence are out of round, so they hold unevenly.

    I'm seriously considering a retrofit with an X/Y table as the mortising head is good.

    Pete

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    St. Charles, IL
    Posts
    420
    Very nice! I think that is one of the nicer benchtop models out there.

    You think your mortiser is heavy? I had to disassemble my 600 lbs. PM720HD to move it.

  6. #6
    Congrats on the new tool!

    corey

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    396
    Quote Originally Posted by Pete Brown
    Try the Lee Valley chisels. I have the same mortiser and have considered non-powermatic chisels. I don't have them yet, but they were recommended to me here.

    Also, does your hold-down tighten down evenly? Mine pinches on one side and is loose on the other. Similarly, my two rollers that hold the work to the fence are out of round, so they hold unevenly.

    I'm seriously considering a retrofit with an X/Y table as the mortising head is good.

    Pete
    My LV chisels are on back-order.

    My rollers are OK, I think you could easily go buy replacement wheels and install them. I can't test how level the machine is since I have no chisels.

    I'm also very happy with how quiet the machine is.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    396
    Quote Originally Posted by Corey Hallagan
    Congrats on the new tool!

    corey
    What's the CB, Iowa? Council Bluffs? Cedar Bluffs?

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Fallbrook, California
    Posts
    3,562
    Congratulations on your new mortiser. Once all the bits come in let us know how well it works.
    Don Bullock
    Woebgon Bassets
    AKC Championss

    The man who makes no mistakes does not usually make anything.
    -- Edward John Phelps

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    396

    Follow up

    Here's the follow-up I promised on the Mortiser.

    I received the set of chisels from Lee Valley. Made in Japan, sharp as heck. I figured I've give them a run without any sharpening.

    A couple pics of the spacers than come with the machine to help with auger depth adjustment. They work very well.

    2.jpg

    Here's a pic of the chisel and bit installed. No need for the bit extender as the LV chisels/augers are full length. The chisel is easily squared to the wood using a parallel board.

    1.jpg

    Here's my first attempt at a 1/2" mortise in yellow pine. I think it looks darn good. Easy to pull the chisel through the wood. I've decided not to sharpen the chisels now as I think they came razor sharp looking at the finished mortise. No splintering in the soft pine noted. The last pic shows the bottom of the mortiser after, literally, 6 seconds with a manual chisel cleaning up the very bottom of the mortise.

    3.jpg4.jpg
    5.jpg

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Sacramento, CA
    Posts
    153
    Looks nice. I'd email Amazon in the refunds department and ask for a partial credit to cover the damage or have them source a replacement part. I bet you'd get another $30-$50 off. Your items should be in new and not damaged condition. Amazon has credited me several times when larger equipment arrives blemished (but works).

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Gambrills, MD - Near Annapolis
    Posts
    556
    Your mortises look good. How is your hold-down? Does it tighten evenly without racking?

    Woodwork just did an article (several actually) on mortises. In one of them, they compared a bunch of different chisels. The Lee Valley ones were one of the sharpest out of the box.

    Most (but not all) of the others did fairly well after some sharpening, despite a sometimes 10x difference in price.

    Pete

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    Georgia
    Posts
    396
    Quote Originally Posted by Pete Brown
    Your mortises look good. How is your hold-down? Does it tighten evenly without racking?

    Woodwork just did an article (several actually) on mortises. In one of them, they compared a bunch of different chisels. The Lee Valley ones were one of the sharpest out of the box.

    Most (but not all) of the others did fairly well after some sharpening, despite a sometimes 10x difference in price.

    Pete
    I gotta tell you, the hold down is fantastic. The "U" vertical hold down is fine, but the wheels for holding the piece up against the fence are perfect. The piece only moves when I want it too. Everything seems well tuned with very little effort.

    Great machine so far. I must admit, after reading a couple of threads on here about Powermatic's decline, I was worried. But this machine is everything I could ask for.

    The LV chisels really aren't too expensive. $105 for 4 of them.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Fallbrook, California
    Posts
    3,562
    That mortise looks mighty fine. Thanks for the input on the Lee Valley mortise bits.
    Don Bullock
    Woebgon Bassets
    AKC Championss

    The man who makes no mistakes does not usually make anything.
    -- Edward John Phelps

  15. #15

    grunt grunt

    I ordered mine two weeks ago from the local outfit. Ordered the LV chisels, I'm anxious to get er set up and going. Did it come with a sharpening cone? I thought that I read that it did?

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