Unboxing.
The jig arrived yesterday. I've taken out of the box. It is a very substantial piece about 10" x 10" by about 12" tall. It has provision to mount it to a bench or a wide piece of flat stock or mount it to the wall. I might try the wall option. It sounds good to me.
It came with a vise-grip type clamp, two square drive bits (one about 3" long and the other about 6" long. There are storage receptacles on board to hold the square drive bits.
It came with a very long drill bit, probably because it can handle thick materials.
The drill bit has a built in storage area which incorporates a guide for attaching the depth stop.
It included samples of screws in three sizes.
And it included an instruction manual.
For years I've been telling people that pocket hole joinery is so intuitive that two holes and 5 minutes is the total learning curve.
Not so with this unit. I will have to read the manual to see how to use it.
It has two bushings. One is fixed and the other one can move laterally, so you can adjust the distance between holes from 3/4" to 1½".
The rest is is a mystery until I read the manual. On the left there is a thickness gage. I assume that I have to dial in the thickness of the material. But I don't know if it is the thickness of the vertical or the horizontal material if they are not the same.
There is an adjustable stop on the right that will allow you to place the screw holes uniformly on narrow stock (like face frames). It also moves out the the way for sheet goods.
My old Kreg jig (pre-blue plastic, cast aluminum) has a clamp that does not hold its setting (I suppose I could find a replacement somewhere). It does not have enough substance to balance a large sheet of plywood (say 12" x 36" x 3/4") so that operation is always clumsy.
I see the the Master Jig from Kreg (on Rockler) for the same price as I paid for the Porter Cable. It is roughly equivalent. They both include the clamp, bit and some sample screws. The PC seems much, much more substantial and I like the mounting options. If it works as advertised it seems like a better deal and a better engineered unit. Certainly cast aluminum is more durable than blue plastic.
I have a new medicine cabinet to make in the next couple of weeks, and I plan on using this for the carcass. The screws will be hidden between the studs. I will add to this report at that time.
Forgot to mention, it has a hook up for a shop vac. I will have to get an adapter for my dust collector.
No animals were injured or killed in the production of this post.