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Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 4 de marzo de 2025
Poorly made, dirty, dinged up even though it was supposed to be new. I could not get the wiring to work even with adapter plugs. You get what you pay for and this is cheap for a reason. Returned it the day after it arrived. Spend a little more and get something that may actually be worth the money.
Customer
Comentado en el Reino Unido el 18 de marzo de 2024
Items described as included are not as described. There is only 1 alloy bit not 2 as supposed to be as per description, 2 there is only 1 drill bit not 2 as per description. So I took photos so you can see them.
simon
Comentado en el Reino Unido el 17 de febrero de 2024
This tool was used with a Makita-style 65mm trim router and used to join wood strips together with dominosOut of the box the cuts were accurate enough to match up and the dominos were a snug fitAlthough the trigger socket and plug were 'A' type: found in Chinese and US appliances, using plug adapters should enable the trigger otherwise it can be rewired or used manually with just the router on/off switchIt's better than the Festool because it has a wide range of options as a router setup and good depth controlIt's also safer than the Tianli mortiser because the cutter is covered. This device has saved me from spending £700 on a rip-off Festool Domino
Zach
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 19 de noviembre de 2024
This jig is pretty good, there are several like it out there. The intent of this thing is obviously to make mortises for floating tennons, think festool domino, but at a fraction of the price. This thing is capable of doing that.As far as what's good about it...1. It has a plexiglass window so you can see what you're doing. Some versions of this jig do not have that.2. It's fairly repeatable.3. 65mm routers that fit in this thing are cheap and abundant. The cheapest one I was able to find on amazon will run you around 40 bucks. So for a total of around 100 bucks, plus a few cents for some screws... You can get a machine that can do a lot of what a domino can.As far as issues I had...The screws for horizontal adjustment are not long enough, which means the mortises it makes are too wide for standard 8mm dominos, even when bottomed out (With the jamb nut still in place, I wouldn't remove it), so I had to supply my own, longer screws.The power cord that goes to the router isn't a completely standard american 120V power cord, tools with polarized plugs are difficult to get into it because it's designed for straight prongs, which I believe may be a chinese standard that's similar to the american, but not quite the same.It should probably also have some kind of clamp to hold it to the work piece, that would make it more repeatable and safer to use. I may drill and tap the top plate to add that later, since I've already modified mine to hardwire my cheap 65mm router in. Although the domino doesn't have this feature either, I think with this tool's design that would be a good idea.As far as what it doesn't do that a domino can... It doesn't have a tilt function, and it doesn't have a dust collection mechanism. That being said... For 100 vs. 1000 bucks it's still a great deal. If you intend to reinforce long miter joints, you'll have to find a different way to do it.
Barry
Comentado en los Estados Unidos el 13 de octubre de 2024
Was easy to set up and use
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