The good the bad and the ugly
I made a cube in MDF, and cut all the sides myself with my Festool TS 55 at an angle to make mitre joints. I wanted it to be a 40cmx40cmx40cm cube, but the first cut I made I measures 40cm, and cut with the 2mm thick saw blade one the inside. So after that first cut, I decided to build a 39.8cm x 39.8cm x 39.8cm box. No one will see this ;-).
Now the the good, the bad and the ugly of the Festool TS 55
The Good
The saw has perfect precision. Full stop.The Bad
Sawing requires a real vacuum cleaner, not just an old Phillips one that happens to be standing in the garage. For one, the Phillips just doesn\'t displace enough air to keep up with the saw dust. And the side of the Phillips waste bag is just too small. I needed to refesh the bag after sawing 5 meters.The Ugly
I\'m not 100% happy with the result. Some of the corners are fine, others aren\'t. The biggest gap I have is about 0.5mm, but you notice it. The reason that this didn\'t work out perfectly is not that the panels had different sizes, but rather that it was difficult to clamp the box together with the 4 clamps I had.Obviously, I still have to learn a lot, and that’s why I’m doing it of course. And by building this cube, I learned a lot. For example, now I know that when take the 6 sides of the cube, all cut with a 45 degree angle, all with grooves for biscuit joints, and you dry fit them, it is very difficult to take it back apart, even though you’re not using glue.
I’m wondering how the cube would look when I use my router to make the edges and corners round. I may try that later.
Here is a picture of the cube, next to the saw.
I’ve also included pictures with a close-up of each of the corners. As you can see, I should be able to do the gluing better next time.