Yes, I have the DW-735. Thinking back I'm at closer to 15 years with it. I know $150 more is a lot of money. I would save up and spend the extra money. The two speeds will come in handy when you find that wood that will make perfect blanks. Even on the slower feed rate which gives you more cuts per inch you can get tear out. Then I switch to handplanes. If I wanted straight grained boring wood I'd use MDF.
I started with a single speed planer and the difference is substantial. I planed wood with it until the smoke escaped from the motor. It was a Delta and I had no complaints with it. You don't know, what you don't know.
Most people will not deal with rough lumber so it's usually cheap when you find it.
Rough lumber is everywhere if you look. Here in the Midwest most of our pallets are hardwood. I feed those to my planer too. Motorcycle shops that import bikes have pallets made out of bizarre woods we don't have here in the states.
I use a metal detector to find the nails.
Spalted Maple pallet wood box.
I heat my house with wood. I take every crotch I can get, most firewood guys don't want them as they are tough to split. I open them up with a chainsaw. Sometimes they are a jewel and sometimes like this one, just firewood.
Firewood guys will give away the crotchwood rather than deal with it.
You don't need a chainsaw mill to cut rough planks, it helps but is not necessary, a chalk line will mark the slabs out for ya.
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