|
Also this company is good to do business with. This clamp is a must to get good tight joints that stay at 90 degrees. Prompt shipment and arrived as stated.
It is easy and precise to use. It does an excellent job of pulling right angle joints together before installing the screws. The Kreg Right Angle Clamp is an essential tool for someone doing a full range of pocket hole joinery. The rubber coated handles provide good and comfortable grip.
Its a simple tool and does its job. It is helpful for clamping pieces of wood together when you are joining wood for pocket holes or even for gluing.
On advice from others I bought two for constructing a bath vanity. Well worth the investment. They held the plywood panels together very snugly to counteract the Kreg screws tendency to pull a panel slightly inward.
Trust your own judgement, though, go to a demo at a woodworking show or store and try them. Try THAT with a corner clamp. Conceptually, it's very simple. By the way, you can use these to clamp items that are not flush to one another, e.g., frame reveals, parts with differing thicknesses, and inset panels. As to the review that talks about blowing out the pocket hole, the only things that could possibly cause that are drilling too small a pocket (the clamps work perfectly with Kreg drills), clamping so tight as to crush the pocket, or clamping at an extreme angle (the clamp will work at a range of angles, not just 90 degrees). Or perhaps the owner has a defective clamp. It replaces one of the flats on a normal Kreg clamp with a pin that fits in the pocket hole. If you need 100% square accuracy, you can hold a square in place against the joint while you drive the screw.
To the reviewer that wondered about using pocket holes on the outside of items: In cabinet making, it's the INSIDE of the cabinet that's the concern. In any event, this is a highly unusual complaint, and I've yet to hear from anyone else with this problem. This clamp works flawlessly every time. Use the clamps in one or more pocket holes while you drive the screws into the others. The ply or particleboard sides and back of the cabinet are completely hidden for most cabinets and virtually always covered on end cabinets.
|