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I am fairly new to woodworking and just starting to outfit my shop with power tools. One area that I find confusing is the use case for a jointer vs. a planer.

Both tools seem to have very similar capabilities, and probably could substitute for one another on certain jobs. I've got a limited budget and space. So I need to prioritize whether to get a planer or jointer. Versatility will definitely be a priority in this decision.

In the interest of making the answer useful beyond just my situation, I'm looking for an answer that summarizes for each tool which tasks they are ideal for, which tasks you can reasonably manage with them, and tasks which just aren't advisable/possible.

Any other guidance in your answer as to deciding between these two tools is also welcome.

5 Answers 5

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  • A planer
    • will ensure that 2 opposite faces of a piece of wood are parallel to each other
    • will generally handle wider pieces of wood
    • is not the appropriate tool for working the narrow edge of a 'wide' x 'thin' board (think shelving), as you cannot safely feed a tall, skinny piece of wood through it
    • allow you to make an uneven board an even thickness from one end to the other*
  • A jointer
    • will ensure that 2 adjacent faces of a piece of wood are at a 90° angle to each other (assuming the fence is set at 90°)
    • will generally handle narrower (6" or less) pieces of wood (Note, industrial sized jointers can be had in 12" or larger, but $$$$$)
    • can make two opposite sides of a piece of wood parallel by running the same adjacent side of the wood against the fence and jointing the sides to be parallel. (this might take some work and shimming)

*borrowed from Dfife's answer

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  • How does the last part work (parallel faces)? Both sides being orthogonal to a third one is not sufficient, a good wedge will have that, too. Commented Mar 20, 2015 at 16:58
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    Hence the parenthetical comment at the end of that point. I should probably remove it entirely, though. It sounded good as I was banging out the original answer!
    – FreeMan
    Commented Mar 20, 2015 at 17:01
  • Ah, so you mean with additional measurements and some jigs/shims? Commented Mar 20, 2015 at 17:03
  • That, indeed, was what I meant. Not the greatest selling point...
    – FreeMan
    Commented Mar 20, 2015 at 17:05
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A planer is used for making two edges parallel while a jointer is used for making straight or flat surfaces. Let's say you have a warped board (suppose it looks like a banana from end to end). If you pass it through a planer, it will enter as a banana and exit as a banana. A jointer, on the other hand, will shave off bits of the banana, little by little, until it comes out flat.

On the other hand, if you have a board that is one inch thick on one side, and 1/2 in thick on the other, passing it through a jointer will NOT make the two sides of the board equal. See the image below:

enter image description here

So, you need both. There are ways to rig a planer to flatten a board, but I don't think there's a way to make the sides of a board parallel with a jointer.

Edit With limited budgets, it's probably not a bad idea to look into a jointer/planer (e.g., https://www.grizzly.com/products/G0675). One cutter head is used for both planing and jointing--it just requires some sort of adjustment. I don't know how that adjustment is done because I don't own one. (I didn't learn about these until after I bought both a jointer and a planer).

Edit 2 Here's a video that shows you how to surface a board with a planer: http://www.finewoodworking.com/workshop/video/a-planer-sled-for-milling-lumber.aspx. I actually built this jig before I bought my jointer and found it so cumbersome that I just bought a jointer. (Although, I was using dull knives at the time, which makes it nearly impossible to pass the board through the sled without it sliding off.)

Another couple of options:

  1. have the lumberyard surface and straightline your lumber. They do an okay job, but if you're making fine furniture, don't expect your piece to be perfectly square.

  2. Surface your material with a handplane. This is a long process (and quite tedious), and it may cost you quite a bit to get a good hand plane capable of doing the job.

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  • Good points about "banana wood" and evening thickness.
    – FreeMan
    Commented Mar 19, 2015 at 15:24
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    I think between my answer and @FreeMan's, you're pretty covered.
    – dfife
    Commented Mar 19, 2015 at 15:35
  • Thank you for the diagram of a cross-wise warp. Folks should view the FineWoodworking video to see a warp that runs lengthwise and is wavy (up and down) along the length of the board. The videoed jig's flat bottom meets the planer's flat table so you can remove top-side wood in a geometrical plane that is parallel to the table surface along the entire length of the board. Then you can just flip the board and plane again without the jig. imgur.com/a/Xz0eM Here's a similar video that shows a similarly warped board: finewoodworking.com/2016/07/27/turn-your-planer-into-a-jointer
    – Jon Freed
    Commented Jan 6, 2017 at 18:45
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I agree that you should have both. However if there were budget and space considerations I would go with a jointer. A jointer is going to enable you to get those precise surfaces for joining your wood. A planer on the other hand is a smoothing/sizing tool and much of what you do with it can be done with a little more elbow grease using hand planers and sanding. Often when you are purchasing rough cut lumber at specialty lumbar yards they can run your purchase through a planer.

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To the fine answers already posted, I would just add this: The jointer can give a board a perfectly straight edge, which is an important first step in accurately cutting the board to width and length. The straight, jointed edge runs along the tablesaw's rip fence when you are cutting the board to width, yielding an opposite edge that is also straight, and parallel to the first. When crosscutting, the jointed edge gets held against the miter gauge or crosscut sled to help ensure that the freshly cut end is square - at 90 degrees to the board's long edge.

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  • The importance of being able to create perfectly straight boards should not be underestimated. A significant part of woodworking involves constructing jigs, and because jigs are a reference surface for further work, they need to be as accurate as possible. A jointer can be the difference between a project that is successful vs a half-complete project that involves a lot of cursing and swearing.
    – William S.
    Commented Mar 21, 2015 at 23:11
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I agree with the statement that an active woodworker could really make use of both a dedicated jointer and surface planer. But I only have a surface planer due to my very small workspace and I have made-do with hand tools for jointing.

This is due to the fact that most of my work involves typical boards that are 3/4" thick and a few inches wide. To joint the edge, I will run a Stanley #7 hand plane over the edge (this length of hand plane is called a "jointer" - I think it's 20 inches long).

If I need to flatten one face (which is very rare - only if I have a rough-sawn board), then I can still get it flat with the hand planes. I use a combination of a Stanley #5 and the aforementioned #7. The #5 is fitted with a cambered blade which removes wood more aggressively.

One those occasions when I need to use a jointer to ensure a square cross section (such as glueing up several pieces to make a square bed post), I still use the hand planes and just get it as close as I can. I check frequently with a square. In my bed project, it was never all that important that I get the angle perfect; once things were together, the gaps closed up fine.

To have had a dedicated jointer would have been nice and, as an engineer, I would have felt good about having perfect 90 degree angles all around, but in the end it worked out fine that I was simply close.

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