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Thread: Building Roubo workbench, you can only have one…Jointer or planer ?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2011
    Location
    St.John, Indiana
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    138

    Building Roubo workbench, you can only have one…Jointer or planer ?

    Looking to build a Roubo, if you could only have one of these power tools (besides a table saw)
    what would it be, a jointer or Planer?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    N. Idaho
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    1,621
    Planer for sure. I built mine with a 6”jointer and lunchbox planer. The jointer was handy but the planer was indispensable.
    "You can observe a lot just by watching."
    --Yogi Berra

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    NE Ohio
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    7,029
    Hands down the planer.
    "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." - John Lennon

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Mar 2003
    Location
    SE PA - Central Bucks County
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    65,885
    Planer because you need a planer if you add a jointer. The latter only flattens and straightens. It does not thickness.
    --

    The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jan 2019
    Location
    Fairbanks AK
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    Planer. Jointing the edges of 2x4 stock isn't so bad with a Bailey number 4, a breeze with a number 6 and an opportunity for joy with a #8.

  6. #6
    I think you have your answer, just incase you don't like the sound of that...
    A good bandsaw if you don't have an extractor for the thickness planer, as the Roubo is a hand planers bench.
    That's what I would want anyways

    Good luck with the bench build
    Tom

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Kansas City
    Posts
    854
    Depending on the boards, you might be able to get away with simple skip planing.

    If not, a planer sled will definitely get you there.

    Planer all day

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Peoria, IL
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    4,524
    Quote Originally Posted by Scott Winners View Post
    Planer. Jointing the edges of 2x4 stock isn't so bad with a Bailey number 4, a breeze with a number 6 and an opportunity for joy with a #8.
    I thought Roubo benches were made of much heavier stock than 2x4.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    Peoria, IL
    Posts
    4,524
    In my opinion, there is no option of only one. If you intend to be a serious woodworker, you need both for real truing of stock. But, I was trained old school. You know, before there were people telling me to subscribe so I can see some furniture made of torched 2x4s.

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Jan 2019
    Location
    Fairbanks AK
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    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Coers View Post
    In my opinion, there is no option of only one. If you intend to be a serious woodworker, you need both for real truing of stock.
    And a dust collector. I got the DC first knowing the planer was coming, but when my own first board came out of my new planer, I knew. The cutterhead was still spinning down in the planer and I was trying to figure out how to shoe horn a jointer in.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Apr 2017
    Location
    Michigan
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    2,772
    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Coers View Post
    In my opinion, there is no option of only one. If you intend to be a serious woodworker, you need both for real truing of stock. But, I was trained old school. You know, before there were people telling me to subscribe so I can see some furniture made of torched 2x4s.
    Um,,,there were serious woodworkers before jointers.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 2018
    Location
    Ottawa, On, Canada
    Posts
    82
    Quote Originally Posted by Tom Bender View Post
    Um,,,there were serious woodworkers before jointers.
    Haha, I love your reply

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