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mark downing
03-10-2020, 9:16 PM
My shop is too small for separate jointer and planer. Any recommendations on 12" combos? The budget can't handle MiniMax or Felder goodies, rats.
Bed rollers and helical head capability seem important but the machine will be used mostly on a hobby/carpentry level.
Advice appreciated.

Paul F Franklin
03-10-2020, 9:25 PM
See my mini-review of the King Canada 12 j/p here: https://sawmillcreek.org/showthread.php?280642-King-Canada-KC-12HJPC-12-quot-Jointer-Planer-Combo-First-impressions

I only got it a few weeks ago and don't have a lot of time on it, but am quite happy with it so far.

Other similar machines are the Jet and Balleigh. Grizzly's is 5HP and has the porkchop guard, and IIRC, requires one to remove the fence to convert between j/p.

Curt Harms
03-11-2020, 8:08 AM
Jet, Baileigh and Rikon look pretty similar. I have the Jet with straight knives, modified the fence so it moves about 90* instead of 45*. I made my own mobile base so will sit in a space about 2' X 5' and is easy to pull out to use and push back. I don't find change over from jointer to planer a big deal at all. Planning ahead helps with minimizing changeovers. Tables are about 55" overall. Some find that too short, I usually cut to rough length then flatten which usually wastes less material. I rarely joint long material and have used roller stands for additional support on those few occasions.

John TenEyck
03-11-2020, 10:42 AM
If you can afford a new 12" Jet or Grizzly, for example, then you can afford a used MiniMax or Hammer. Why settle for less than you want? FWIW, I've been using J/P's for 30 years. Neither of my machines had bed rollers. IMO they are unnecessary; just keep the table waxed and all will be well.

John

Scott Buehler
03-11-2020, 7:15 PM
I just purchased the Rikon jointer planer combo with helical head and love it! And even better, I got it for 15% off through ACME Tools! It has a new cast iron extension roller on the outfeed side. Very good fit and finish.

nicholas mitchell
03-11-2020, 8:25 PM
Definitely look at the Scorpion line from CWI. I would consider it superior and more fully equipped, including heli-head, than any of the machines mentioned so far.

mark downing
03-11-2020, 8:52 PM
John, other than craigslist and eBay can you suggest other used tool sellers?
Thanks guys for all the help.

David Kumm
03-11-2020, 9:30 PM
An insert head is a benefit as many if not all of the machines you are looking at will lack a chipbreaker and pressure bar. If the machine is designed with an infeed roller, cutterhead, and outfeed roller with no metal pieces between them, an insert head will negate some of the benefit of the missing parts. Dave

John TenEyck
03-11-2020, 10:02 PM
John, other than craigslist and eBay can you suggest other used tool sellers?
Thanks guys for all the help.

They show up here now and then in the Classified section, and at WoodNet.net. Facebook Marketplace is another place to look. Woodweb.com has a Buy/Sell section with lots of traffic, though mostly industrial eqiupment. And there's ExFactory and other auction sites to follow. It's not nearly as easy or fast to find a used machine as buying a new one, but patience usually pays off.

John

michael dilday
03-11-2020, 10:07 PM
I have the Jet JJP-12 12" Jointer/Planer with the straight knives. It is a beast and it works well. Like Curt Hamms said I also cut to rough dimensions then joint/plane. If you plan your work you can minimize changovers. It only takers me a minute or less to change between jointing and planing and it is a great space saver. Even with the shorter beds I still get good results jointing.

ed vitanovec
03-11-2020, 11:12 PM
Rikon Tools has a Jointer / Planer, nice machine.
https://www.rikontools.com/product/25-210h

Andy D Jones
03-11-2020, 11:16 PM
I noticed that the J/P's that use the older style angled ways to adjust jointer table heights, are the same ones that require the jointer fence to be removed prior to converting the machine to planer use. The geometry of the hinges on the tables prevents them from remaining parallel to each other when they are raised up out of the way for planing.

The jointer tables that use the eccentrics to adjust table heights (similar to parallelogram jointers) stay more or less parallel when the tables are raised out of the way for planing, thus the jointer fence can be left on the machine while planing.

Removing/replacing the jointer fence before/after using the planer adds to the conversion effort. Plus, you have to find a place to put the jointer fence when planing.

Andy - Arlington TX

Scott Buehler
03-11-2020, 11:58 PM
The Rikon has chip breaker, metal infeed and rubber outfeed rollers, takes me 20 seconds to switch from jointer to planer. It's priced very competitive. May not be quite as nice as Felder or Hammer, but less than half the price.

nicholas mitchell
03-12-2020, 12:03 AM
Folks should stop saying Felder and Hammer in the same breath. They are night and day.

Rod Wolfy
03-12-2020, 5:15 AM
I have the Jet JJP12 w/the helical head. Before that I had a Felder BF631, with the j/p on it with straight knives. The Jet is every bit as good, if not actually a lot better that the Felder was. The knives don't leave planer knife marks on the wood & it was much better on the figured wood than the Felder. I have yet to turn a carbide cutter on the Jet. It's on a mobile base, so it moves easily, has a 3hp motor and it works great with my Rockler 4" dust right fittings.

Jim Becker
03-12-2020, 9:50 AM
Folks should stop saying Felder and Hammer in the same breath. They are night and day.
Only with respect to being different product lines. In the context of the OP's question, they are both priced higher than he currently has budget for, at least for a new unit.

Erik Loza
03-12-2020, 11:36 AM
Folks should stop saying Felder and Hammer in the same breath. They are night and day.

LOL, I say them in the same breath all the time but are you a day person or a night person? That’s the real question, right? If I suddenly needed a truck for towing trailers and bought a Tacoma or Ford Ranger, then I’m probably going to be disappointed. On the other hand, if I just need a truck for hauling bags of mulch or the occasional sheet good, that 3/4-ton truck was overkill and I wasted good money.

I’ve said this before and I’ll keep saying it: The VAST MAJORITY of solid wood machines you will find in professional shops are mass-produced Asian stand-alones (or antique American iron). Somehow, we all assume that pro shops spend big money on standard machines and always have better machines than we do. Of course, many do but most do not and more importantly, they are getting it done every day on these very budget-oriented machines. For example, I was in one of my shops yesterday. Door manufacturer. They are getting ready to take delivery of a quarter-million dollar, 5-axis CNC machine. Surely, they have the most state-of-the-art shapers, right? WRONG: They have a bunch of ancient Weavers, all cobbled together out of spare parts. Our most basic shaper, the Hammer F3, would be a massive upgrade. Another example: One of my local customers specializes in architectural solid wood table tops. They have owned a Hammer A3-41 for about 5 years and do all their jointing and planing on it. They purchased it before I was back onboard with Felder and to be honest, if they had approached me, looking for equipment and after seeing what they were doing, I would have told them not to buy the Hammer and that they really needed an industrial jointer and industrial planer. But, they haven’t managed to kill that A3-41 yet and really haven’t had any service issues it.

Point being, we get in in our heads that “you must have this level” in order to have a good experience or produce good results but a lot of that is more perception than reality. At least in my experience. I hope this all makes sense. BTW, the Hammer A3-31 is the best selling machine in the entire Felder lineup, and by a mile.

Erik

mark downing
03-12-2020, 12:53 PM
Rod, what mobile base did you choose? The Jet doesn't come with a base, correct?

Rod Sheridan
03-12-2020, 1:21 PM
Well said Erik.

I often ask customers during seminars to identify which piece of wood came out of the A3-31 or the AD741.

Only I can tell because I numbered them.

My original A3-31 is over 1,500 hours now, no repairs, only routine maintenance.............Rod.

Rod Wolfy
03-13-2020, 6:02 PM
Mark,
I don't recall who made it. I picked it up at the shop where I got the Jet. I've added a couple of photos. It works great and is adjustable.
427828

michael dilday
03-13-2020, 8:19 PM
Mark,
I don't recall who made it. I picked it up at the shop where I got the Jet. I've added a couple of photos. It works great and is adjustable.
427828

Looks like a nice base. I got the floor model JJP-12 and got them to throw in the base. My mobile kinda sucks but I get by.

Derek Cohen
03-13-2020, 8:50 PM
Well said Erik!

As an amateur with a workshop in my garage, the addition of Hammer machines (K3, N4400 and A3-31) - replacing Taiwanese-built machines - has been a dream come true. Perhaps my standards for tools are lower than many here, but I do not view them as limiting the quality of the furniture I build.

It is sobering for me to be reminded that these guys turn out some amazing work with minimal tools ....

https://i.postimg.cc/XNF3wzBK/VietnamesetoolsoffToolsforWorkin-1.jpg

Regards from Perth

Derek

Patrick Walsh
03-13-2020, 9:21 PM
Ok I can’t help myself.

I will confirm what Eric saiz to be very true. Sure there probably are just as many pro shops with pro level equipment in them but that’s just my opinion. I don’t know any more than anyone else around here. Well not true as I make my living working as a employee building stuff out of wood in someone else’s shop. I’m exposed to shops at random on the regular but not in and out of a new one everyday like a plywood salesman.

I’ll keep it simple. The difference imop in use and at leas to me comes down to how well a machine holds its calibration. Some just won’t or don’t and the time spent trying to keep up with chasing it is not worth your while vrs employing a work around and giving up on the machine.

I personally don’t see how in a production environment of any sort regardless of how big or small stopping every ten minutes to adjust the feed rollers, pressure bars, outfeed table cuz it keeps dropping, ripping off the dust chute cuz the dust collection was paid zero attention to or the dam dust collector and duct work were not sized properly and the machine keeps backing up any any other million possible and very regular occurrences with crap machines.

But so far in my experience I must be the minority as every shop I have worked in and to date is just as Eric suggested. The boss and most all employees see nothing wrong with it or chasing their tails all day or just accepting piss poor results and then work that reflects such. But you know the boss is always watching wondering why everything takes so long riding your ass making clear he ain’t making money. I suppose maybe they don’t feel like they are chasing their tails and maybe it’s just me and a few others on the side of the fence and instead of the 2 hours a day wasted on paying a employee to operate a crap machine it’s easy enough to just say the employee is the problem. I expect my work to be perfect, like perfect. It never will be perfect but I’m sure not gonna accept “ah the dam jointer cuts giant bow” so I guess my work ain’t gonna be flat or straight. But so many do.

I’ll say this, my Martin jointer sits probably collecting rust. Daily I use a powermatic 12” machine with tables in need of serious adjusting so short compared to a machine actually worth of a production environment and a fence that won’t hold 90% and must be checked every single time you walk up to the machine. Weekly I also use my Felder Ad941 and by comparison how the powermatic jointer and planer “separates” the planer 22” wide my takeaway is immediately this POS Felder is such a joy to use by comparison and I have like zero love for it. But it is heads and shoulders nicer than any powermatic or grizzly. Being single phase and only 4hp and the lightweight build overall I know I’d fry the thing in no time running it for hours on end day in and day out like I do daily for my work. In no time the machine would exhibiting all the same problems of a powermatic or grizzly. Out of the box new and or with light use it does feel like a benz by comparison though.

Some perspective I’ll often mill stock for 3-4 hours at a time. Take lunch and hit it for another couple hours. The other day I literally ran the new old polish gomad for seven running hours with a 30 minute break. It didn’t flinch one bit. Like I turned it one for 30 seconds for one pass. I thought to myself I bet this thing has been run like this day in and day out all day just like I use it it’s entire life and it’s still as good as the day it was new and waaaaaay nicer than any powermatic, Minimax or Felder.. It’s not pretty, there is nothing cool about it. But where it impresses is ability towards its intended use without every having to worry a dam about anything really going wrong mid run. And used it was $3700

Warren Lake
03-13-2020, 11:15 PM
Pro shops now? or pro shops that were around for 50-80 years or more. Some with 50 -80 or over 100 employees, they had next to no offshore, at least that offshore.

It likely didnt exist in the same amount and it also would not fit the mentality of trained europeans, they have little interest in setting up shops with it, if they did I would have seen it.

If I look at the first row of many rows of the auction folder of auctions I attended its almost all heavy European stuff. If offshore was there it was in small portable dust collectors. Every auction introduced me to more quality mostly european and some US stuff, some I had never of. One shop had over 10 shapers mostly SCM. No brand was more prominent in shops than SCM. Typical to see a big top pro shop with 5 or more different SCM machines and 10 or 20 other brands of heavy european mostly and some US stuff. Shapers were almost always 1 1/4 spindles. Number of impressive US manufacturers.

scott vroom
03-14-2020, 11:38 AM
Folks should stop saying Felder and Hammer in the same breath. They are night and day.

Let me guess...you're a Felder owner :D

Brian Holcombe
03-14-2020, 3:53 PM
I think if you are frugal in business it is advisable to buy good equipment one time and make sure it’s the kind of stuff that makes for efficient process.

Mick Simon
03-15-2020, 9:50 AM
Agreed. Well said, Erik. Your comments were right on the mark. While I was awaiting delivery of my A3-41 a fews years back, I went to a Felder open house (LA) to look over the entire Hammer line. I don't mean this as a put-down to anyone at Felder, but there was a near ubiquitous effort to push me toward Felder when I specifically went to see the Hammer stuff. I was in the woodworking machinery business, from hobbyist to multi million dollar production equipment, from 1985 until I retired in 2015, so I understood, listened and let it pass.
I just watched a video tour (FW) of Michael Fortune's shop. In addition to the 15 Hp variable speed 24" planer, he has 3 or 4 lunchbox planers that get used much more often than the big stuff. He must have 10 bandsaws, including a Ridgid 10" that gets used every day. He has a 12" 3 phase industrial jointer and a 6" Jet jointer. Guess which one gets used the most.
I do not need the additional beefiness nor the "bells and whistles" that Felder offers over Hammer. I have been very, very happy with my A3-41. I smile every time I use it. I have a close friend here who has a complete Felder shop, including the AD741. I've used it extensively and can honestly say it has never made me regret buying Hammer.
I'm heading to the nursery this afternoon in my Honda pickup to get some mulch!

Scott Buehler
03-15-2020, 6:49 PM
People are getting way off subject here. We are talking about a jointer/ planer combo machine. Sure there are high price and more affordable options here. But to be honest when I ran my production shop I would never even think getting a combo machine, it's just not efficient or enough capacity for a full production shop. Not that they are not good machines, because I just bought one and love it, but I just switched from perfectly good stand alone machines to save space, and that's what I think the majority of us who have combo machines bought them for... space saving. So to get into holding tolerances and such is a mute point. The OP was merely asking for opinions on combo machines. I'm sure experiences with certain machines, pros and cons, is what he is looking for.

Warren Lake
03-15-2020, 7:44 PM
the old guys I knew bought combos because one purchase gave them five machines. Plug and play, one hookup. Both cases it was not space, it was cost saving compared to buying five separate machines. No one ever talks about that, its not just space.

Fast forward that to when I bought them. I got the same five in one machine for the price of what one used same quality machine would cost. They are great value.

Art Mann
03-15-2020, 8:38 PM
Chances are, the answer to your question is there is not a MiniMax or Hammer (or any other used JP for that matter) within 300 miles. That is how it is where I live.


If you can afford a new 12" Jet or Grizzly, for example, then you can afford a used MiniMax or Hammer. Why settle for less than you want? FWIW, I've been using J/P's for 30 years. Neither of my machines had bed rollers. IMO they are unnecessary; just keep the table waxed and all will be well.

John

Mike Wilkins
03-16-2020, 11:15 PM
Save your pennies and get the Hammer with the Silent Power cutter head. I went from an Asian-made straight knife machine to the 16" jointer-planer from Hammer. Smooth surface is the result. I like the resultant surface so well that I am now ready to sell my double drum sander, which I got to sand out the ridges left from the straight knife machine.
Hammer sometimes runs a special on the 12" machine; check the Felder/Hammer site.

ChrisA Edwards
03-19-2020, 9:50 PM
For the OP


12", 4HP Jointer/Planer, 8 years old in very good shape. Runs great. $2,350
Includes: Silent Power spiral cutter block (only used on first edge of carbide cutters), Extension table with two mount rails, digital dial indicator and hand wheel, rolling carriage and lift bar.

In NJ

This info is from the Felder Owners Group.

Found the Ad on Craigslist https://cnj.craigslist.org/tls/d/hopewell-hammer-a3-31/7095778719.html