DeWalt 735 Planer
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texomawood
- Gold Member
- Posts: 91
- Joined: Mon Apr 08, 2013 9:16 am
- Location: Texoma, Tx
DeWalt 735 Planer
I have a chance to buy a near new DeWalt 735 planer from a relative for 1/2 price. Does anybody have experience with these???
Yes, this is an excellent planer. Buy it!texomawood wrote:I have a chance to buy a near new DeWalt 735 planer from a relative for 1/2 price. Does anybody have experience with these???
Gale's Law: The bigger the woodworking project, the less the mistakes show in any photo taken far enough away to show the entire project!
JUMP AT IT - JUMP AT IT - jUMP AT IT - ETC!!!!!
Extremely happy with mine for the last 5 years.
And the Shopsmith planer and jointer sharpening unit will work to sharpen blades. Also, you should buy an extra set if they are on sale. You can use these while the others are being sharpened. They don't dull very fast, but when they do, it's nice to have second set.
P.S again! The blades are a simple snap to re-place. No fiddeling at all!
Extremely happy with mine for the last 5 years.
And the Shopsmith planer and jointer sharpening unit will work to sharpen blades. Also, you should buy an extra set if they are on sale. You can use these while the others are being sharpened. They don't dull very fast, but when they do, it's nice to have second set.
P.S again! The blades are a simple snap to re-place. No fiddeling at all!
Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
Yes - I have one and it is a work horse. The dust collection system is second to none on it. If it doesn't have them already, buy the infeed and outfeed tables - with these installed, this model was shown to be the only "portable" unit to have virtually no snipe in (I think) a Wood Magazine planer review sometime recently. Here's a link to the infeed/outfeed tables:
DeWalt 735 Infeed/Outfeed Tables
It's not really all that portable, as it weighs something like 80-90 lbs, but it's a big step up from all the benchtop planers on the market these days.
DeWalt 735 Infeed/Outfeed Tables
It's not really all that portable, as it weighs something like 80-90 lbs, but it's a big step up from all the benchtop planers on the market these days.
'78 Mark V 500 #27995 (my Dad bought new)
'82 Mark V 500 #96309
Two '47 10E's (serial#4314+6149) - one a dedicated drill press and the other a lathe
Two 10E/ER in parts slowly being restored…#26822 and #????? (SS plate missing)
SPT's: Bandsaw, Belt Sander, Strip Sander, Jointer, Jigsaw, Biscuit Joiner
'82 Mark V 500 #96309
Two '47 10E's (serial#4314+6149) - one a dedicated drill press and the other a lathe
Two 10E/ER in parts slowly being restored…#26822 and #????? (SS plate missing)
SPT's: Bandsaw, Belt Sander, Strip Sander, Jointer, Jigsaw, Biscuit Joiner
- apexsunguitars
- Gold Member
- Posts: 107
- Joined: Wed Jul 10, 2013 12:18 pm
- Location: Porter, TX
I've never actually used a 734, so I can't make a 1st hand comparison, but the 734 is more in the class of bench top planers - AFAIK is is well regarded but the 735 is a much heartier animal - bigger, much heavier/beefier, and is a definite step up over the bench top planers. Ultimately comes down to budget and need. The minimal snipe with the 735, as well as being able to handle larger stock was the deciding factor for me. The dust/chip handling abilities is a major bonus as well.
'78 Mark V 500 #27995 (my Dad bought new)
'82 Mark V 500 #96309
Two '47 10E's (serial#4314+6149) - one a dedicated drill press and the other a lathe
Two 10E/ER in parts slowly being restored…#26822 and #????? (SS plate missing)
SPT's: Bandsaw, Belt Sander, Strip Sander, Jointer, Jigsaw, Biscuit Joiner
'82 Mark V 500 #96309
Two '47 10E's (serial#4314+6149) - one a dedicated drill press and the other a lathe
Two 10E/ER in parts slowly being restored…#26822 and #????? (SS plate missing)
SPT's: Bandsaw, Belt Sander, Strip Sander, Jointer, Jigsaw, Biscuit Joiner
The 735 also has two speeds for a better finish on the final pass the feed rate can be slowed down.dgale wrote:I've never actually used a 734, so I can't make a 1st hand comparison, but the 734 is more in the class of bench top planers - AFAIK is is well regarded but the 735 is a much heartier animal - bigger, much heavier/beefier, and is a definite step up over the bench top planers. Ultimately comes down to budget and need. The minimal snipe with the 735, as well as being able to handle larger stock was the deciding factor for me. The dust/chip handling abilities is a major bonus as well.
Jack
- apexsunguitars
- Gold Member
- Posts: 107
- Joined: Wed Jul 10, 2013 12:18 pm
- Location: Porter, TX
ah, cool. there's a 734 for sale in hosuton for 250 so i was thinking that it was just last year's 735 model then it might be a good deal. of course with amazon selling the 735 kit complete with both feed ramps for less than 6 bills it still looks to be pretty good value at a new price! i amy look there if i cant find a deal on a SS planer.
Two each Shopsmith Model 500, 505, 510s. Sawsmith Model 500003. Most of the SPT goodies aside from the compressor and the Planer.