Google Smoot Lumber and look at their molding catalog. What you have sounds like their profile SM-82.
Type: Posts; User: Keith Bohn; Keyword(s):
Google Smoot Lumber and look at their molding catalog. What you have sounds like their profile SM-82.
I've been around a few but never owned one.
I did own a Duro (Duro is the company that Delta/Rockwell bought the design from) but the Duro I had was somewhat different in design.
It's a swing arm bracket for a Delta/Rockwell No. 43-502/43-503 Over Arm Router/Shaper.
It's not a part for a feeder though the function is the same.
The World Congress Center is so large you can see the curvature of the earth.
All kidding aside, yes, set aside at least two days, three if you're the type to gawk a little.
Mostly it is...
Call Bobby at Woodworker's Tool Works and order rubber tires.
Crown those and your bands will ride to the top.
It's simple physics.
Late 60's/early 70's?
Delta? I bought the Oliver, for $35.
That's 1% of what Eagle sells them for.
The first rule is never go with the intention of buying a specific thing/machine/tool, unless you intend/are able to outbid everyone there.
Years back I watched a Delta standard-duty lathe with a...
The fact that it's vibrating is a symptom of another problem, like maybe a set in the belt (to name one). I would recommend fixing that first.
Just saying.
It's somewhere between 1982 and 1984.
Pentair bought the Rockwell machine line in 1984 and changed the name back to Delta.
I'd heard that also, that there was a culling of parts and the highest quality parts went to the importer paying the most, but where I've only ever heard that was some on some woodworking forum so...
I have a long standing curiosity with woodworking machine manufacturers. To that end I'm finding this an interesting discussion for sure but, aren't all the Asian made machines made by Yeou Eir...
It is still operating.
http://www.northfieldwoodworking.com/
Not in San Diego but in western Wisconsin, you can hook up with Bobby at Woodworker's Tool Works. They re-tire band saw wheels. Their company goes back a ways (multiple decades) and have been doing...
I agree with Leo. The PLS 180 is great. It will be expensive (upper $200's).
Someone on the OWWM forum recently bought a Bosch GLL2-50. It retails for around $200.
I'm still waiting to hear...
FS Tool make great blades, and they aren't super expensive.
Yeah, Powermatic made great machines, but their paint jobs left a little to be desired.
It might be limited but try Ohio Travel Bag.
An outfeed table is the single easiest safety feature you can add to a table saw.
A T-square fence is the single easiest feature you can add to make woodworking more fun.
In 1984 the No. 180 retailed for $3880. That was without the grinder, motor, motor control and sectional feed rolls.
Today that planer would retail for around $8700 for matching build quality.
Yes. It's my avatar on that forum.
For me, a 1939 Unisaw and a 60's vintage Acme 2C edge sander.
I love a quick down and dirty machine base, but on the Old Woodworking Machines forum someone started a topic call Shopmade Machine Bases: The Cream of The Crop. There are some pretty unbelievable...
Like this?
http://www.thehardwarehut.com/images/pdf/kv/kvm-uccb.pdf
I'm pretty sure Hafele and Sugatsune makes similar hardware.
Google Stanley No. 71.
That or maybe crank neck chisel.