dcos
2025-09-05 12:00:56
My wife and I recently bought a CNC woodworking router and have started a part time business with it. We bought a lot of pine slab wood from an Amish saw mill and were using a heavy duty sander to finish the boards. This planer has made that job SO much easier. It leaves very little effort and leaves the wood very smooth so it takes very little finish sanding. You do get snipe near both ends of the wood, so either have to leave the boards long enough to cut the snipe off or use scrap boards of the same thickness in front and behind so the snipe is left on those boards. The directions say you can adjust the feed trays to stop this but I haven't really tried that. There is also a lot of sawdust scrap, so it really must be hooked up to a shop vac, which works very well. This planer is a little wider than a lot of them and even though 13 inches is kind of limiting, wider planers are MUCH more expensive. We've used it quite a bit over the last few months and it's still going as strong as when we got it without having to change blades yet. Very happy with it.
ladoorhanger
2025-07-12 14:55:13
I'm a finish carpnter and woodworker living in Los Angeles Ca, since 1968. Been using the Dewalt 735 series planers for a very long time, thouht I'd switch it up and give this one a shot. Only used it about a dozen times so far on walnut, white oak and vertical grain douglas fir. And am very pleased with the results. It's quieter, lighter, cheaper and easier to operate than the 735. Might also have better chip collection. if these results continue it will pretty much be a great deal. So, very impressed with the performance of this tool to date. BTW chipped blades are easier and cheaper to fix than with the 735.
James Cooley
2025-06-26 18:14:26
I have a fairly well equipped shop with most all stationary, bench and power tools for a homeowner. I am pretty picky about the tools I buy balancing quality with cost. I had never had a WEN product before until I bought their 12 inch variable speed drill press last year. I was hesitant because the cost was low but it had all the features I wanted. What an awesome machine. It exceeded my expectations. So when it came time to buy a planer I thought I would give WEN a try again. I compared all the brands. Everyone raves about DeWalt all the time. I'm sure its a great machine, but I was thinking 'do I really need that for the cost?'. The WEN is very well built. Most all reviews for a WEN planer are for the straight blade version but I bought the spiral cutter head for a little extra cost. It cuts extremely clean, is fairly quiet for a planer and easy to use. Although I work in my shop all the time, I haven't used a planer since shop class in high school almost 40 years ago. When I first got it I wasn't sure how everything operated. After a couple passes it was as easy as pie. Even let the wife do a couple passes and she loved it too. Great results and highly recommended.
Wholezy
2025-06-16 13:16:10
I'm a weekend woodworker/hobbiest for no reason other than to change gears from my long hours behind a keyboard or in data and server rooms so my experience is "intermediate" but goes back to 1997. I have a woodshop full of tools and know my way around power and hand tools pretty well. Despite my years of woodworking, I had only electric and manual hand planers as I enjoy the manual process most but recently fell in love with trees. As such, I began harvesting trees about my wooded 10 acres so had to upgrade many tools. Upon months of research and two models I returned to Lowes, I discovered the following:When running a slab of Hickory through a 2 and 3-blade Planer, expect lots of snipe and a poor surface.A single hidden fence nail will destroy your blades and you'll have to replace all of them.Running cherry wood through, fares better but still rougher than I'd like on 2 and 3 blades.2 and 3 blade Planers are cheaper for a reason. Upon returning both, I fixed my eyes upon a Spiral Bladed Planer. Why? Better surface obviously, but more important, a spiral blade is made up of many little square blades in a corkscrew configuration on a cylinder. A dulled blade is simply rotated 1/4 and it's good as new. Plus, you can do that 3 more times as each surface is sharp. -You don't destroy and replace the entire spiral. I intended to buy Dewalt but at 600+ I decided to try WEN's version instead. I have other WEN products in my shop and have never been disappointed so I took a shot. (See Pics) I chainsaw-slabbed a 24" piece of hickory with some wet-ish heartwood and ran it through the planer about 10 times on each side. Pignut Hickory has a Janka hardness of 2,140 lbf when compared to White Oak (1,350 lbf), Black Walnut (1,010 lbf) or standard Douglas Fir pine you'd get at Lowes (620 lbf). I found that planing off more than an 1/32 per pass was pretty taxing on the machine for Hickory but the Black Walnut planing (pic 4) handled 1/32 easily. Pine could pass 1/16 or deeper with little issue. The front gauge is my favorite feature as I only need to lower the blade mill onto the wood to see how deep I'm going. The gauge does go up to 1/8 but what kinda Psychopath planes 1/8th per pass? It's a planer, not a table saw. Additionally, remember that the softer the wood, the higher the probability of snipe so keep your depth low to save those ends. Still, snipe was far more reasonable than the 2 and 3 blade systems I tried previously.Let's talk support now. Mine came with a cracked dust collector. A very small and minor crack on this flimsy plastic piece but no surprise there. It still worked even with the crack but I'm not dropping 400+ on something that's got even the slightest blemish on it so I emailed WEN support at the email on the Owners Manual. Don't bother, they don't respond to emails. I called them the next day and spoke with a US Based Support Rep. He seemed annoyed to help but actually did his job and sent me a new dust collector. Friendly? No. Supported. Yes. This cost the product a star as I hate calling and waiting on hold despite the short wait time. Don't give an email if you don't respond to them, is all I'm saying. Overall, the Machine is a 5-star purchase for performance, ease of use and value. I don't regret saving 200+ on buying this WEN instead of Dewalt.
Cmacinsa
2025-05-17 10:54:24
I like this planer for it's consistent planing ability. It's not a smooth as glass cut, but it cuts without issues which is what I need. My previous planer would cut smooth as glass for approximately 100 lineal feet and then cut more typical to this planer which is still smooth. However my previous planer would continue the downward trend of cutting less smooth over each passing foot where this planer with the spiral teeth is staying sharper longer. (In case you are wondering what type of wood, mostly oak and cherry - cherry basically killed the last planer). I do recommend this planer.
Cliente Kindle
2025-05-11 18:21:37
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dcos
2025-04-26 12:59:30
My wife and I recently bought a CNC woodworking router and have started a part time business with it. We bought a lot of pine slab wood from an Amish saw mill and were using a heavy duty sander to finish the boards. This planer has made that job SO much easier. It leaves very little effort and leaves the wood very smooth so it takes very little finish sanding. You do get snipe near both ends of the wood, so either have to leave the boards long enough to cut the snipe off or use scrap boards of the same thickness in front and behind so the snipe is left on those boards. The directions say you can adjust the feed trays to stop this but I haven't really tried that. There is also a lot of sawdust scrap, so it really must be hooked up to a shop vac, which works very well. This planer is a little wider than a lot of them and even though 13 inches is kind of limiting, wider planers are MUCH more expensive. We've used it quite a bit over the last few months and it's still going as strong as when we got it without having to change blades yet. Very happy with it.
ladoorhanger
2025-04-06 13:07:01
I'm a finish carpnter and woodworker living in Los Angeles Ca, since 1968. Been using the Dewalt 735 series planers for a very long time, thouht I'd switch it up and give this one a shot. Only used it about a dozen times so far on walnut, white oak and vertical grain douglas fir. And am very pleased with the results. It's quieter, lighter, cheaper and easier to operate than the 735. Might also have better chip collection. if these results continue it will pretty much be a great deal. So, very impressed with the performance of this tool to date. BTW chipped blades are easier and cheaper to fix than with the 735.
James Cooley
2025-03-04 15:59:06
I have a fairly well equipped shop with most all stationary, bench and power tools for a homeowner. I am pretty picky about the tools I buy balancing quality with cost. I had never had a WEN product before until I bought their 12 inch variable speed drill press last year. I was hesitant because the cost was low but it had all the features I wanted. What an awesome machine. It exceeded my expectations. So when it came time to buy a planer I thought I would give WEN a try again. I compared all the brands. Everyone raves about DeWalt all the time. I'm sure its a great machine, but I was thinking 'do I really need that for the cost?'. The WEN is very well built. Most all reviews for a WEN planer are for the straight blade version but I bought the spiral cutter head for a little extra cost. It cuts extremely clean, is fairly quiet for a planer and easy to use. Although I work in my shop all the time, I haven't used a planer since shop class in high school almost 40 years ago. When I first got it I wasn't sure how everything operated. After a couple passes it was as easy as pie. Even let the wife do a couple passes and she loved it too. Great results and highly recommended.
Wholezy
2025-02-27 17:56:40
I'm a weekend woodworker/hobbiest for no reason other than to change gears from my long hours behind a keyboard or in data and server rooms so my experience is "intermediate" but goes back to 1997. I have a woodshop full of tools and know my way around power and hand tools pretty well. Despite my years of woodworking, I had only electric and manual hand planers as I enjoy the manual process most but recently fell in love with trees. As such, I began harvesting trees about my wooded 10 acres so had to upgrade many tools. Upon months of research and two models I returned to Lowes, I discovered the following:When running a slab of Hickory through a 2 and 3-blade Planer, expect lots of snipe and a poor surface.A single hidden fence nail will destroy your blades and you'll have to replace all of them.Running cherry wood through, fares better but still rougher than I'd like on 2 and 3 blades.2 and 3 blade Planers are cheaper for a reason. Upon returning both, I fixed my eyes upon a Spiral Bladed Planer. Why? Better surface obviously, but more important, a spiral blade is made up of many little square blades in a corkscrew configuration on a cylinder. A dulled blade is simply rotated 1/4 and it's good as new. Plus, you can do that 3 more times as each surface is sharp. -You don't destroy and replace the entire spiral. I intended to buy Dewalt but at 600+ I decided to try WEN's version instead. I have other WEN products in my shop and have never been disappointed so I took a shot. (See Pics) I chainsaw-slabbed a 24" piece of hickory with some wet-ish heartwood and ran it through the planer about 10 times on each side. Pignut Hickory has a Janka hardness of 2,140 lbf when compared to White Oak (1,350 lbf), Black Walnut (1,010 lbf) or standard Douglas Fir pine you'd get at Lowes (620 lbf). I found that planing off more than an 1/32 per pass was pretty taxing on the machine for Hickory but the Black Walnut planing (pic 4) handled 1/32 easily. Pine could pass 1/16 or deeper with little issue. The front gauge is my favorite feature as I only need to lower the blade mill onto the wood to see how deep I'm going. The gauge does go up to 1/8 but what kinda Psychopath planes 1/8th per pass? It's a planer, not a table saw. Additionally, remember that the softer the wood, the higher the probability of snipe so keep your depth low to save those ends. Still, snipe was far more reasonable than the 2 and 3 blade systems I tried previously.Let's talk support now. Mine came with a cracked dust collector. A very small and minor crack on this flimsy plastic piece but no surprise there. It still worked even with the crack but I'm not dropping 400+ on something that's got even the slightest blemish on it so I emailed WEN support at the email on the Owners Manual. Don't bother, they don't respond to emails. I called them the next day and spoke with a US Based Support Rep. He seemed annoyed to help but actually did his job and sent me a new dust collector. Friendly? No. Supported. Yes. This cost the product a star as I hate calling and waiting on hold despite the short wait time. Don't give an email if you don't respond to them, is all I'm saying. Overall, the Machine is a 5-star purchase for performance, ease of use and value. I don't regret saving 200+ on buying this WEN instead of Dewalt.
Cmacinsa
2025-01-20 11:35:46
I like this planer for it's consistent planing ability. It's not a smooth as glass cut, but it cuts without issues which is what I need. My previous planer would cut smooth as glass for approximately 100 lineal feet and then cut more typical to this planer which is still smooth. However my previous planer would continue the downward trend of cutting less smooth over each passing foot where this planer with the spiral teeth is staying sharper longer. (In case you are wondering what type of wood, mostly oak and cherry - cherry basically killed the last planer). I do recommend this planer.
Cliente Kindle
2025-01-08 16:33:58
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