The other day I hit a tiny piece of a nail with my DW735 planer. It left shiny spot in the board followed by a ridge the remaining length of the board. I had nicked the blade.
Figuring it was only a matter of time before I'd need to replace them I picked up a new set of blades which cost me $82 of our dollars plus tax plus tax. About $95 all tolled.
The blades are 2-sided and come in a pack of 3 (it's a 3-blade head on that planer). I flipped the blades around, and as I was doing it I noticed that the blades have about 3/32" side-to-side play. Hmmm ...
I ended up loosening each blade and shoving one to the left and the other two to the right as far as they would go, and guess what? No ridge!
This means I can get 3 nicks before I have to turn the blades over, and 3 more before I have to replace them. It effectively triples the life of the blades. This little discovery could account for me saving a couple of hundred dollars.
OK, maybe this is nothing new but I was pretty happy to discover it
Figuring it was only a matter of time before I'd need to replace them I picked up a new set of blades which cost me $82 of our dollars plus tax plus tax. About $95 all tolled.
The blades are 2-sided and come in a pack of 3 (it's a 3-blade head on that planer). I flipped the blades around, and as I was doing it I noticed that the blades have about 3/32" side-to-side play. Hmmm ...
I ended up loosening each blade and shoving one to the left and the other two to the right as far as they would go, and guess what? No ridge!
This means I can get 3 nicks before I have to turn the blades over, and 3 more before I have to replace them. It effectively triples the life of the blades. This little discovery could account for me saving a couple of hundred dollars.
OK, maybe this is nothing new but I was pretty happy to discover it


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