Post
by J.F. Custom » Mon Apr 28, 2014 7:28 pm
Pete has pretty much covered it all in the above post so far as to the "why" or "pros" of helical cutter heads, so I won't double up.
As a side note however, I would caution you about comparing it to a thickness sander (or the lack thereof) for figured timber. Though the helical heads are advantageous to finishing figured material over a standard blade setup, I would not consider it for back and side thickness material, as Pete also alluded to.
These are two different machines, that cross over a little. A thicknesser is just that - it is designed to remove quantity of timber to your desired thickness in relatively rapid fashion. They work best with thicker, longer stock material of non figured stock. Another name for a thickness/drum sander is 'finish sander' and realistically, this is what they are designed for.
You don't want to be trying to reduce an 8mm board to 2.4mm for a side unless you have plenty of time to burn and are prepared to clean your paper religiously on a drum sander. By the same token, you don't want to use your thicknesser to attempt to take figured material down to 2.4mm at all. Not "impossible", but the risk is very high of irreparable tear out or shattering the piece, thereby ruining it. Ultimately you won't 'ruin' a piece through a thickness sander, though burning it is a consideration.
I had a thicknesser and it was useful for electric bodies etc, but due to very limited space and disuse, I sold it. I found that the combination of a well set up bandsaw and a drum sander proved much more useful for luthierie purposes, having first resawn to near dimensions then just finished on the sander. If you have the space, both would cover all bases but if I had to choose one over the other, for our purposes I'd go the sander every time.
Oh and with that particular setup, you are not getting the benefits of the 'shear' cutting action of the helical heads, which account for a lot of the benefits. On that machine, about the only advantage over standard blades is the opportunity to rotate a cutter should one get a nick in it.
Jeremy.