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DELTA TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand

DELTA TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand
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Manufacturer: Delta
Buy DELTA TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand
 

Accessories for your DELTA TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand

Delta 22-677 15-Inch Planer Knives
Delta 22-547 12-Inch Steel Knife Set for 22-540 Planer
Delta 22-549 Replacement Knives for Delta 13-Inch Planer
Delta 50-326 Planer Stand
DELTA 50-359 12-Inch Planer Connect
 

Additional DELTA TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand Information

Delta TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand

 

What Customers Say About DELTA TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand:

I've put pine, basswood and maple through it with no complaints. After some consideration, I bought this planer last summer. You're going to want to get the dust chute which is sold seperately though. It was on sale through Amazon at the time for about $275 delivered. Since that also included a spare set of knives, it was a hard deal to beat. Otherwise you'll be spewing chips ALL over your workshop. I find that snipe is minimal, I'm sure that's due to the cutterhead lock which is a great feature available on many planers these days.Setup was simple with the only thing that needed to be done was assemble the stand and bolt the planer to it.All in all I think this is a great planer for the weekend woodworker who won't be sending 100's of boardfeet a day through it.

I have had trouble on occassion with feeding, but it has only been on very thing starting pieces (1/4" inch). I picked this planer up for about $270 with free shipping. Thicker lumber hasn't been a problem at all. For the price and low to moderate usage, it can't be beat. Relatively little snipe. If you looking for an industrial, stationary planer, this isn't it. If you're looking to plane a few board feet every time you do a project, wait for a sale and jump on it.

My TP400LS worked well for about four months (low useage, about 50 to 100 lineal ft of board) then suddenly stopped feeding. Do not buy the Delta TP400LS 12 1/2" thickness planer.If only it would feed. If it would feed, it would be a great product. Having now read other reviews (obviously too late to do me any good) I see that it is a serious problem, one that Delta does not appear to be willing to address. I would not recommend buying this product.

But the sets sell for $30-50 dollars. I took my Delta back to the retailer and he graciously returned it to his vendor for reasons of customer satisfaction. Well this is really the same problem because when the blades go dull, the cutter head starts giving more resistance to the rollers and the boards stop feeding properly. A disposable item is something that can be thrown away without having to pay much heed to the cost. I even purchased a planer, a delta 400, and ran through a set of blades testing it.

And almost every small planer on the market these days has gone to disposable blades. All of the disposable blade units do. I was looking for a small planer and there are some really cool looking tools out there. And this just isn't good economy for cheap high speed steel construction that chips and dulls so easily in this application.

The way I want to use my planer, I could easily go through a couple of sets of blades a day. They didn't have a no star rating, but this one deserves it. If disposable planer blades sold for a dollar a piece, one could regard this as a fairly good deal. And if the truth be told about it, they do cost only a few pennies to make, and package, and ship all the way from China. And it's a very simple fix for the industry to make this technology more viable.

Hi Guys, I just spent a good long time researching a tool purchase. So this unit is a definite pass. They have got so many reasons that a board can dull a blade they never get pinned down to making a blade that's tough enough for the job. As it turns out, I'll be buying a planer with resharpenable blades (that cost less than disposable blades by the way), and a rather robust and expensive blade sharpening machine, ALL for less than the price of one of these glitzy little name brand jobs. And calling it disposable is just plane ridiculouse. Simply ship the planers with a dozen sets of blades and offer free knife replacement for the life of the unit. What I found out is that any planer that relies on a set of disposable blades is going to put a big hole in my budget if I actually intend to use it.

Thirty dollars a dozen would be more in line with the performance of these disposable blades. When something is as public domain as a knife, and the complexity of manufacture less than that of a happy meal toy, and it can be turned out on a machine by the thousands per hour, there is something very wrong with charging $30-$40 dollars for it. There are two big common threads in all of the reviews for small planers and they are: The blades go dull too fast, and the planer doesn't feed the wood like it should. It's just plane stupid to buy a planer that uses these "disposable" blades.

I have had this planer for two years. I wished the chip/dust chute was angled to the side. It does a great job and snipe is minimal.

It works great. This is extra on the Dewalt model. It is very easy to change the blades and they are two sided and can flip them around when one side dulls.

It comes with an infeed and outfeed table. I wished I had the money to buy a 15" model with an induction motor. This tool is very loud and does get hot to the touch.

I highly recommend getting the 4" dust chute. This would help tremendously with guiding my 4" dust hose away from the exiting stock.

Buy DELTA TP400LS Shopmaster 15 Amp 12-1/2-Inch Benchtop Planer with Stand
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