Customer Reviews 

Great planer
2008-11-27For the price, I expected this planer to walk on water. It comes pretty close. The biggest problem with these little guys is snipe. This design vertually eliminates the problem. Snipe is visible on some softer woods, but it is not serious. I compare this to a huge industrial planer where I buy furniture wood, and a Delta TP 305 which was terrible in this regard. I wore the TP305 tool out in about 30 hours of use. (It stopped cutting parallel to the bed.) I successfully rigged 4" dust collection on the Dewalt. Serious dust collection is a requirement on planers. They produce hazardous levels of dust and shavings. Be sure to buy the bed extension plates. Those are required to reduce snipe. Makes in- and out feed more manageable too. Durability seems good so far. Great tool.

good buy
2008-11-11It is a pretty good planer, very solid. The only reason I'm writing this review is because I find it interesting that I bought this for about $425 almost 2 years ago. Skip investing in the stock market, I might just buy a truck-load of planers =)

Disapointed and now my back hurts
2008-11-01I went to lowes after much anguish as to which planer to buy. I bought the dw735 at $549 brand new in the box factory sealed btw. Well I got the beast home by myself, down the steps, mounted onto my workbench. I also went out the next day and got some hose fittings so I could attach my vac if I wanted to. Well after all that I went to power it up for the first time this morning so I could plane the boards I have, and...... utter disapointment. The unit did not even power on. The manual said to check the power cord, dust port, and top cover. All seemed fine, even the outlet was working fine with other items. So needless to say, less than 1/2 hour of my first attempt to use the thing, it has been returned to lowes. Now I wish I had not bothered with this unit and had gone with something else instead.

Turning Wood into Noise!
2008-10-21I bought this planer at the local woodworking show, in May 2006. For $400 out the door the dealer tossed in a spare set of knives and the dust collection system. Projects have included a new rudder and daggerboard keel for my sailboat, made from African mahogany, and this planer really did a nice job. I added a pair of in/outfeed tables and I highly recommend doing this. Raising the outfeed table slightly will eliminate most tendency to snipe. I also added the DW7350 mobile base, which I highly recommend.
I am still on my first set of knives, but in fairness I've only worked soft woods such as mahogany and poplar. Still, I think many of the problems I've read about come from folks expecting too much from this thing. I use my band saw to resaw material to within 1/16" of my desired thickness, then use the planer for the final cleanup. I get less waste and mess, and my knives will last longer. I can see someone using this planer in a production shop having some problems, but for the home user it excels.

Works well at either speed.
2008-10-05Works way better than the equivalent JET and much better than my (really) old Mikita. I recommend the folding table accessory, but I still get snipe on short boards. (Probably a matter of adjustment). I had been dreading the day that the blades needed to be changed (turned around actually, blades have two edges) but that turned out to be a snap! The rotating drum has pegs that fit into alignment holes in the blades. I rarely use it on the 'finish' speed (179 cuts per inch) as it works just fine at 'rough' 96 cpi. I've had no trouble at all going down to 1/8 inch thickness. However, connected to my dust collection system, chips fall back down onto the table surface!? It doesn't do that when it isn't connected to the dust collection system, so I don't know what that's all about. It's an ear buster, and it pretty well needs a dedicated 20 amp circuit.