Tiny hard to adjust guides; flimsy tension and tracking mechanism; sleeve bearings; hard pass.
519869
Hard to see but my 28-100 (the saw you pictured) is 2nd from right in pic though. The...
Type: Posts; User: John Lanciani; Keyword(s):
Tiny hard to adjust guides; flimsy tension and tracking mechanism; sleeve bearings; hard pass.
519869
Hard to see but my 28-100 (the saw you pictured) is 2nd from right in pic though. The...
Rip and re-glue, anything else is a waste of time and effort and will show for the life of the piece. As mentioned above, most likely a starved joint, epoxy is fairly intolerant of high clamping...
The motor is labeled for 240 volt 50hz, is that what you are providing to it?
Personally, I'd use Ipe or one of the other tropicals sold as decking. Much stiffer than poplar so you'll be able to use narrower rails and stiles, and no worries about rot resistance. The only...
And none of that in any way shape or form answers the OPs question.
One of my best and most enduring friendships was formed almost 30 years ago when I lent a complete stranger (a new neighbor at the time) a Sawzall and an extension cord. Tools are simply relpacable...
Pro shops and schools are easy, insurance co. simply says you must have one or you get dropped; OSHA doesn't care until there is an accident.
Home shops are by attrition, it will be decades before...
Wow, planing shavings at 0.000052" thickness must be amazingly satisfying...
Starrett quality took that hit years ago when they offshored many of their offerings.
I don't think it's been mentioned but the factory body rust warranty will be voided for that panel if a body shop fixes it. No way I'd take it at any discount, make them replace the panel before you...
Be forewarned, Renovo will tell you a part is in stock, charge you for it, and then ship the part when they are good and ready. Last time I waited 6 months for a part that was listed as in stock when...
Looks to me that the patent in question has already expired?
https://patents.google.com/patent/US9724840B2/en
You're welcome Jerry, thanks for the update.
Price all of your options with a full set of replacement inserts and mounting screws, (or two, you never know when proprietary inserts will become unavailable and they'll always be more expensive...
Mine too, it loves the snow. I'd never sacrifice shop time just to keep the car dry.
As a long time Subaru owner this makes me sad for some reason...
Bearings for that jointer are only 20 bucks, insert head costs more than the machine is worth. Seems an easy decision to me.
The plate is straight and parallel, goes in either way. You have to pinch the wedges together to get the plate to slide in, lubricate everything generously before you start. A spring from a click...
There's a difference between "2hp" from Harbor Freight and Oneida for example. We need more information about what you're working with to be able to offer suggestions.
Just a question, what specific tool are you using for torqueing the inserts? 45 in/lbs is essentially only screwdriver tight.
I don't think there would be any real balance issue but you could always take the last insert out of every row to maintain balance if the machine showed excess vibration with one insert removed. I...
Take the last insert in a row off and use that screw until the replacements arrive if you really need to get back to work.
In the history of reparing used machinery, I don't think one person has ever said "I sure am glad that I didn't bother replacing those inexpensive 50 year old bearings with dried out grease in them".
Maybe I missed it, has the OP actually confirmed what exact saw is in question other than to say "A Rigid jobsite saw"? If not, everything posted is idle speculation at best.
The Veritas jig is completely adjustable in this regard.
https://www.leevalley.com/en-us/shop/tools/jigs-guides-and-fixtures/32251-veritas-shelf-drilling-jig?item=05J0303