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I have the fever for a Domino but I'm light in the pocket. Missed one on CL.
So the question is: Is there something similar?
"I tried being reasonable..........I didn't like it." Clint Eastwood
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I think you'll be waiting until Festool's patent expires if you want a knock off. I don't know when that will be, but I don't think it's any time soon.
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I've read the Domino alignment can be a little off, I've been told it isn't quite as precise as a quality doweling jig like the Jessem (or one you make yourself).
It seems like the positioning of the machine is accomplished pretty much the same way as a biscuit joiner, and so (at least to me) the alignment issues is somewhat believable. That is, I have used a biscuit joiner quite a bit and do find every once in a while that the alignment of faces can be a fingernail off.
That doesn't tend to happen to me with a quality doweling jig. If I'm very concerned about alignment, I can clamp the jig to the workpiece and I know my registration is going to be spot-on. Often I'll hand-hold the doweling jig and my alignment is still consistently better than I get with the biscuit jointer. Don't get me wrong, my biscuit jointer works great but my doweled joints don't even catch a nail after a swipe or two with some medium-grit sandpaper.
For instances where I want the best of both worlds, I still use my mortising jig:
http://www.jpthien.com/mj.htm
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Bill,
There is no domino knock off that I know of (as said above - festool's patent). I think the next closest thing would be to either make a horizontal router stand and your own floating tenons. I did that for a few years before my wife bought me a domino for my birthday. It worked but was never as accurate as I wanted it to be. Otherwise maybe a beadlock.
Jimmy
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You can build my first generation
horizontal router mortiser for around $75, less if you have some stuff lying around. There are a couple of things a Domino can do that it can't, but there are many things it can do that a Domino cannot. It's fast, safe, and very accurate. Several folks here and elsewhere have one.
John
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(04-03-2017, 10:59 AM)Phil Thien Wrote: I've read the Domino alignment can be a little off, I've been told it isn't quite as precise as a quality doweling jig like the Jessem (or one you make yourself).
If the Domino is off then it is user error.
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(04-03-2017, 12:28 PM)Huxleywood Wrote: If the Domino is off then it is user error.
I agree with that.
I've found that as long as the Domino is registered against at least 2 surfaces--one always being the face where the bit protrudes---then I always get very accurate joinery. If I'm plunging the Domino into a board's face and I'm not using its fold-down fence or have its base against a clamped stop, then when I plunge in, when the bit touches the board, it can make the Domino wobble and the joint can be off.
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Thank you for the responses. I may look into a good doweling jig.
"I tried being reasonable..........I didn't like it." Clint Eastwood
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For a Doweling Jig I have the Dowelmax and love it.
That said, I also own the Festool Domino and find uses for both tools. But the Dowelmax is rock solid.
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(04-03-2017, 12:28 PM)Huxleywood Wrote: If the Domino is off then it is user error.
I haven't used one, only going by what I'm told.
Like this thread:
http://festoolownersgroup.com/festool-to...he-domino/
I'm not knocking it, just saying that for a system that relies on a fence system similar to what a good biscuit jointer offers, it seems logical to assume that you will get alignment about the same you can achieve with a good biscuit jointer.
And I'm pretty good w/ my PC biscuit jointer. But there are times where it seems like the fence rocked or whatever and the registration is a little off.