Firebrick43
Well-known member
I used the Leigh jigs, by the time you set it up, and tweak everything to producing acceptable joints one can have a drawer banged out by hand once they get it downWell how about speed and accuracy. I have both Keller and Leigh jigs. You'll have to pry them from my cold dead hands when I die. For mortise and tendon (or finger joints) a PantoRouter works really well. We've had electricity in the city for a while now.
The fit by hand is great if you use your tails to lay out your pins and you get the wonderful small pin to tail size and interesting spacing instead of bland cookie cutter work with very little extra time
Because all of those things can be significantly sped up with power tools and better quality in many of the cases.For that matter, why would anybody buy a router at all? Everything it can do can be done by hand. And why does op want to use a table saw at all? A hand saw can do it all. Sanding can be fine by hand. A brace can be used to drill holes. Yeah those ideas sound pretty silly too.
That not necessarily true of a router and jig for dovetails unless your running a furniture factory banging out multiples of the same item.
I was very specific as to what was advantageous in regards to hand tools(and we are talking about apartment use which a router is a big no no due to noise) and even talked about having a cabinet saw, planer, jointer, etc yet you present a false straw man argument?
Hell, I have the largest, or close to the largest router they make on my table and 3 other smaller ones for hand use.
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