I have a 5 hp shaper and really don't know how to use it to its potential. I would sure love it if you made several videos on shaper use. Especially baseboard trip and window and door casings. Thanks keep up the great content.
Thanks for making this video. My dad was a cabinet maker turned general contractor. He had a shaper but got out of the business when I was like 14 so I barely got to use it. Then he passed away a few years ago so I was no longer able to pick his brain. Fast foreword to RUclips and I’d see all these wood workers using router tables. Other than size I never was sure what the difference was or if there was one. I assumed the shaper was just a bigger permanent router table designed more for production work rather than hobbyists
Nice machine! Learned a lot on this one. As a hobbyist I'll probably never own such a machine but I do so e smaller scale shaping on my Shopsmith and it works very well for me.
Just one tip - When you're changing cutters, spindles etc, put a piece of plywood or MDF on the shaper table to put metal objects on. Would prevent potential knicks / scratches from developing on the table surface.
I have the Powermatic 5hp shaper and they are definitely worth what you get from them. The only thing I’ve found is you really have to be careful with these machines is they are not forgiving. If you make a mistake they are extremely punishing. I guess all these woodworking machines can be but this is the one I’m most leery of.
I am looking forward to acquire a small Grizzly shaper. I really don't need a big one but even the smaller sibling of the family is a great addition to any hobbyist shop and it brings a lot more flexibility over a router table, I think.
In England we call this machine a spindle moulder, I owned and used mine for years making windows and doors before selling it on. This moulder seems way better than my old Kity machine
Brother I was using my spindle moulder from 95 onward mine spindle is from single shaft that gives 6500 rpm it is used in single side your machine can rotate left and right what was the real use of this make reply.
Great explanation and video; however, you forgot the most important thing: ALWAYS DE-ENERGIZE THE EQUIPMENT AT THE POWER SOURCE (e.g., breaker switch off or unplug) BEFORE WORKING ON IT TO CHANGE TOOLING OR PERFORM MAINTENANCE. DO NOT RELY INTRINSIC SAFETY DEVICES TO DE-ENERGIZE THE PRIMARY SOURCE OF POWER.
Great video. Unfortunately for me I don't use a shaper, I use a router. The shapers must be pretty expensive and the cutting bits must be expensive as well. Again, great video.
I’m looking into getting a jet router table but I am for sure going to making cabinet doors. Do I just get a shaper so I’m not stuck to shaker doors only?
He showed a collet adapter that replaces the spindle. It holds whatever size collet you need, usually 1/4" or 1/2", to fit the shank size of your router bits. You could also use a variety of endmills in a multitude of sizes, and purchase collets for each size endmill shank.
Good morning I love your tutorials and I've been following you for some time now ,my question for you is what is the brand of red cutters and blades you use please send me a link to where i can purchase online I live in the Caribbean and would love to equip the shop with some of these blades and cutters
People purchase router tables and put the most powerful routers available to run large diameter cutters. One major problem with that concept is a router motor is a universal motor and the RPM drops under a load. . The torque and HP of a router is rated at its maximum RPM and not its actual working RPM. In order to ensure that the cutter is rotating at the proper RPM under a load, the router speed must be initially set to an RPM that exceeds the maximum safe RPM of the cutter. The final cutter RPM under load then becomes a hit or miss crap shoot. This can be observed by watching a woodworker cut kitchen cabinet door panel faces with a large panel cutter router bit. You can hear the RPM of the router drop when the wood is fed into the cutter. If the required cutter speed under load is 7000 RPM and to achieve the working RPM the cutter must be initially set to 20,000 RPM, the dynamic balance is off and the cutter will dangerously vibrate. For applications requiring smaller diameter cutters at high RPMs cutting small grooves and slots, a router table does a nice job. When the load begins to slow down the cutter RPM, a shaper is a better and safer choice. A shaper uses an induction motor which will either continue to turn at the initial RPM or it will stall. If the HP of the motor is too low for a given cutter diameter then a larger more powerful motor can replace the current motor or a larger more powerful shaper can be used for a particular job. Shapers and the HP of their motors are selected based upon the cutter selection and the load. If the proper shaper and motor are selected, the cutter RPM of a shaper will not change. This is a far safer option than attempting to push a large, high HP router past its intended purpose. The shaper in the link below (G0510Z) is sold by Grizzly Tools and was also sold by Harbor Freight. It is roughly the size of a router table but the similarity ends there. It is a true shaper and is a much better machine for applications requiring larger diameter cutters. It comes with both a spindle and a collet allowing the machine to use large panel cutting router bits without the dangerous high speed vibration issues. Because of the reduced vibration the cuts are much smoother. This model initially came with a 3/4 HP motor but a 1HP or a 1 1/2 HP motor can be easily switched out if needed. Once the motor is matched to the load, a shaper does a far better job than a router table for panels and moldings. ruclips.net/video/XK0ZM-AYodE/видео.html This link shows several shapers set up as a system to produce kitchen cabinet doors. These are extremely powerful high precision machines designed specifically to produce cabinet doors. ruclips.net/video/R5TUG1v6O5E/видео.html PHD
You forgot the most important thing. Router can cut your finger off but it will take .5 seconds. Shaper can do it 10x faster (and with a cleaner cut making reattachment more successful). But seriously thanks for this info on a commercial machine most of us won’t ever be able to use.
Now you don't have a bit that just spins.. proceeds to say how it just spins. Says you can use any router bit in it, but doesn't say that most routers spin at 22k RPM max speed not 10k.
I've been scrolling comments looking for an explanation of what "it spins around unlike a router which...spins, around." 🤨 so once more for us dumb kids in the back, is there a difference or can this just accept larger bits/ spin slower & with added torque?
Power feeders are AWESOME! They keep your hands away from the cutters and actually give a better cut than pushing by hand. I have powerfeeders on 2 of my shapers and one more for the tablesaw. Looking at one for the bandsaw now.
The shop I work at has power feeders on each of the shapers such a nice thing to have keeps me safe and like the commenter above said makes a very clean perfect cut The rule we have when running grooves is run it twice
Power feeders to make it so much safer. If your what is tearing out when putting a decorative edge on, you can back feed the wood. (Using the power feeder you can run the wood backwards from which way you should be running it)
I've heard of these Shapers but I've never seen on of them before in use.. How much would one of these set me back if I was in the market for a decent one my bro?? If anybody in the comments knows how much one of these would cost me please let me know if u have a moment.. Thanks in advance lads..
Yo my man look up the difference between a timber frame come with Morrison in doubt versus conventional frame as far as windshield hurricane proof all that
Other than cost, why would anyone need to buy a router table setup? I’m not saying not to buy a ‘router’ they’re obviously pretty much required. I’m saying a shaper is essentially a BETTER two in one
this guy has way way too much money. I could never afford what he has in his shop. Must be at least 1 mil or over. Your normal Joe woodworker could not even afford a fraction of what he has got for tools.
I have a 5 hp shaper and really don't know how to use it to its potential. I would sure love it if you made several videos on shaper use. Especially baseboard trip and window and door casings. Thanks keep up the great content.
Dusty…you make me wanna build so much stuff when I watch your videos man! Keep’em coming! Great job!
Incredible overview! You’re a gifted presenter who could make this interesting even to non-woodworkers.
Thank you 🙏
Finally...been wanting a good explanation of them for eight years now. Thank you.
The most straightforward guide made ever
Thanks for making this video. My dad was a cabinet maker turned general contractor. He had a shaper but got out of the business when I was like 14 so I barely got to use it. Then he passed away a few years ago so I was no longer able to pick his brain. Fast foreword to RUclips and I’d see all these wood workers using router tables. Other than size I never was sure what the difference was or if there was one. I assumed the shaper was just a bigger permanent router table designed more for production work rather than hobbyists
Thanks for the great explanation. I’ve never used a shaper before but now my interest is peeked to learn more about them and give it a try!
Nice machine! Learned a lot on this one. As a hobbyist I'll probably never own such a machine but I do so e smaller scale shaping on my Shopsmith and it works very well for me.
Hey thanks: i've been woodworking 10 yrs but never really considered or knew what a shaper was. perfect end to end video.
Just one tip - When you're changing cutters, spindles etc, put a piece of plywood or MDF on the shaper table to put metal objects on. Would prevent potential knicks / scratches from developing on the table surface.
So very talented! Love watching your channel! Getting my 9 YO grandson interested in watching you!
Great vid and you are a great speaker.
Awesome sir👍👍👍👍👍👍 Very valuable information.Thank you very very much for sharing ❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️❤️
I love all 6 of my shapers way more than my 5 routers. They each have their place in the shop.
Great video! this was very informative.
Fascinating! Thanks for sharing. 👌
I have the Powermatic 5hp shaper and they are definitely worth what you get from them. The only thing I’ve found is you really have to be careful with these machines is they are not forgiving. If you make a mistake they are extremely punishing. I guess all these woodworking machines can be but this is the one I’m most leery of.
Excellent tutorial! Thanks!
YOU'RE DA MAN BRO. LOVE YOUR VIDEOS. Wish you could do some complete builds
Thanks a lot for this, super helpful info!
Very informative video, thank you very much.
Awesome video. Thank you!
Great explanation, thankyou!
Great video, thanks for sharing.
I am looking forward to acquire a small Grizzly shaper. I really don't need a big one but even the smaller sibling of the family is a great addition to any hobbyist shop and it brings a lot more flexibility over a router table, I think.
Dream machine, awesome video.
Nice to see king industrial machines , love mine.
In England we call this machine a spindle moulder, I owned and used mine for years making windows and doors before selling it on.
This moulder seems way better than my old Kity machine
Fantastic. Thank you
the features and capabilities is that shaper are very impressive.
a chiwawa router table can only dream of becoming a shaper.
It's a miniature shaper. hahaha
I search and u video was first one to pop up. Lolol
wow, I wasn't sure there was something called a "shaper", but I seemed to recall my Dad had one. thanks
I'm jealous of your shaper. It's the one tool in a wood shop that I'm a bit weary about. 360° of death.
What brand are those cutters? They look fantastic.
You are amazing
This video makes me want to go and buy a shaper
And depending on the machine, you can angle the cutter head.
Thanks for sharing
amen brother, I use my shaper for 90%, routers are great for some things, but shapers are the mac daddy!
😁👍
@@dustylumberco it's nice to see someone I can relate to doing and making wood making videos.
I really appreciate it.
Brother I was using my spindle moulder from 95 onward mine spindle is from single shaft that gives 6500 rpm it is used in single side your machine can rotate left and right what was the real use of this make reply.
I have an old general shaper at the shop I want to make my cutting board handle with it can I pass my shaper only in the middle ?
Nicely Done! RWB
Great explanation and video; however, you forgot the most important thing: ALWAYS DE-ENERGIZE THE EQUIPMENT AT THE POWER SOURCE (e.g., breaker switch off or unplug) BEFORE WORKING ON IT TO CHANGE TOOLING OR PERFORM MAINTENANCE.
DO NOT RELY INTRINSIC SAFETY DEVICES TO DE-ENERGIZE THE PRIMARY SOURCE OF POWER.
Great video. Unfortunately for me I don't use a shaper, I use a router. The shapers must be pretty expensive and the cutting bits must be expensive as well. Again, great video.
Awesome! Love your content. What is the size of that spindle holder? Can you put a 5" height cutter head on that spindle? Thanks
Thanks, are there tall flush cut bits with hearings available ?
Are you set up with an outboard jig? Thx
Bit direction is for climb cutting
Where do you buy the large diameter cutters
What do you do with that huge circular blade cutters?
I’m looking into getting a jet router table but I am for sure going to making cabinet doors. Do I just get a shaper so I’m not stuck to shaker doors only?
Thanks for this - can I ask where you buy your cutters? I'm always on the lookout for well-priced tooling. Cheers
I mostly get mine from Freud 👍
ToolsToday is a good source too. Grizzly has a good selection I’ve found as well
I don’t have a shaper, but I do have an
Ampu-table finger dejoiner.
Thank you for a great video.
How do you fit the small router bits in?
He showed a collet adapter that replaces the spindle. It holds whatever size collet you need, usually 1/4" or 1/2", to fit the shank size of your router bits.
You could also use a variety of endmills in a multitude of sizes, and purchase collets for each size endmill shank.
Good morning I love your tutorials and I've been following you for some time now ,my question for you is what is the brand of red cutters and blades you use please send me a link to where i can purchase online I live in the Caribbean and would love to equip the shop with some of these blades and cutters
How does everything stay so clean in a shop where he cuts wood and makes sawdust?
People purchase router tables and put the most powerful routers available to run large diameter cutters. One major problem with that concept is a router motor is a universal motor and the RPM drops under a load. . The torque and HP of a router is rated at its maximum RPM and not its actual working RPM. In order to ensure that the cutter is rotating at the proper RPM under a load, the router speed must be initially set to an RPM that exceeds the maximum safe RPM of the cutter. The final cutter RPM under load then becomes a hit or miss crap shoot. This can be observed by watching a woodworker cut kitchen cabinet door panel faces with a large panel cutter router bit. You can hear the RPM of the router drop when the wood is fed into the cutter. If the required cutter speed under load is 7000 RPM and to achieve the working RPM the cutter must be initially set to 20,000 RPM, the dynamic balance is off and the cutter will dangerously vibrate. For applications requiring smaller diameter cutters at high RPMs cutting small grooves and slots, a router table does a nice job. When the load begins to slow down the cutter RPM, a shaper is a better and safer choice.
A shaper uses an induction motor which will either continue to turn at the initial RPM or it will stall. If the HP of the motor is too low for a given cutter diameter then a larger more powerful motor can replace the current motor or a larger more powerful shaper can be used for a particular job. Shapers and the HP of their motors are selected based upon the cutter selection and the load. If the proper shaper and motor are selected, the cutter RPM of a shaper will not change. This is a far safer option than attempting to push a large, high HP router past its intended purpose.
The shaper in the link below (G0510Z) is sold by Grizzly Tools and was also sold by Harbor Freight. It is roughly the size of a router table but the similarity ends there. It is a true shaper and is a much better machine for applications requiring larger diameter cutters. It comes with both a spindle and a collet allowing the machine to use large panel cutting router bits without the dangerous high speed vibration issues. Because of the reduced vibration the cuts are much smoother. This model initially came with a 3/4 HP motor but a 1HP or a 1 1/2 HP motor can be easily switched out if needed. Once the motor is matched to the load, a shaper does a far better job than a router table for panels and moldings.
ruclips.net/video/XK0ZM-AYodE/видео.html
This link shows several shapers set up as a system to produce kitchen cabinet doors. These are extremely powerful high precision machines designed specifically to produce cabinet doors.
ruclips.net/video/R5TUG1v6O5E/видео.html
PHD
It is the exact same machine as my Laguna. The only difference is the colour. It even comes in at the same weight.
Where’s Bob Ross when you needed one.
Is the shaper new to yiur shop? Always thought you used a dado stack with your radial saw?
You forgot the most important thing. Router can cut your finger off but it will take .5 seconds. Shaper can do it 10x faster (and with a cleaner cut making reattachment more successful).
But seriously thanks for this info on a commercial machine most of us won’t ever be able to use.
Ueee bella la tua macchina fresatrice
Where do you get larger diameter cutters for tenon
Versatile machine… most cutters now went to inserts instead of brazed carbide
Guy said the bit doesnt spin like a router but spins like a router
Now you don't have a bit that just spins.. proceeds to say how it just spins.
Says you can use any router bit in it, but doesn't say that most routers spin at 22k RPM max speed not 10k.
I've been scrolling comments looking for an explanation of what "it spins around unlike a router which...spins, around." 🤨
so once more for us dumb kids in the back, is there a difference or can this just accept larger bits/ spin slower & with added torque?
What are your thoughts on power feeders for shapers? Do you see a need for one or ever wish you had one?
Power feeders are AWESOME! They keep your hands away from the cutters and actually give a better cut than pushing by hand. I have powerfeeders on 2 of my shapers and one more for the tablesaw. Looking at one for the bandsaw now.
The shop I work at has power feeders on each of the shapers such a nice thing to have keeps me safe and like the commenter above said makes a very clean perfect cut
The rule we have when running grooves is run it twice
Power feeders to make it so much safer. If your what is tearing out when putting a decorative edge on, you can back feed the wood. (Using the power feeder you can run the wood backwards from which way you should be running it)
What size is this unit if you don’t mind me asking?
Thank you in advance...
Great video!
It’s a 5hp unit 👍
@@dustylumberco
Thank you my man!
whats the model number on that shaper? ITs not listed on the KC website.
can you make hard wood flooring joints with that shaper?
i think router + table are more suitable for this
Yes you can and way faster and safer than a router table. Use a powerfeeder and you can crank out flooring in no time!
what is the cost of a shaper like yours
The router can do all that the shaper can and more the shaper is just bigger and more powerful
I've heard of these Shapers but I've never seen on of them before in use.. How much would one of these set me back if I was in the market for a decent one my bro??
If anybody in the comments knows how much one of these would cost me please let me know if u have a moment.. Thanks in advance lads..
I have never seen a shaper before because I have only used routers
Hi. How much
Maybe one day.. lol Dann tools are expensive lol
Buy used. Much better.
Teacha
Yo my man look up the difference between a timber frame come with Morrison in doubt versus conventional frame as far as windshield hurricane proof all that
Shapers rpms are to slow for most router bits
Other than cost, why would anyone need to buy a router table setup? I’m not saying not to buy a ‘router’ they’re obviously pretty much required. I’m saying a shaper is essentially a BETTER two in one
A router is more portable. You can put an edge on something that's very long or a large table or something two large to put through the shape
Use it! Instead of just talking. Many have never seen one in action. You misssed ur opportunity Day’am!
That's the angriest router I have ever seen.
Decaf.
this guy has way way too much money. I could never afford what he has in his shop. Must be at least 1 mil or over. Your normal Joe woodworker could not even afford a fraction of what he has got for tools.
He has way too much money? What do you mean?