Brad - that's pretty good. My version - The DP table (exact same DP as in your photos) was raised fairly high, because I needed every bit of the quill travel for hogging out some mortises. Turned my head, brad-point bit grabbed my hand - pretty cool - I had never seen a knuckle up close. Some number of dozens of stitches. All fine. The bar-code wrist band they put on you at the ER - that is taped to the DP immediately above the Start switch. heh-heh-heh.
Which - by the way - is why I built a new DP table with a lot of gizmos - to make it easy to clamp the workpiece and minimize lame excuses for doing stupid stuff. In the process, my crank handle got more inaccessible due to some table features I don't want to give up. Hence my OP, and hence my soon-to-happen order for the parts you explained.
Seems like a socket wrench/ratchet with about a 10" handle would work for the lock - drill + tap a setscrew through the socket itself to keep it on the lock pin/shaft. Especially if someone makes one with the reversing switch at the end of the handle, not on the body of the ratchet? Throw the reversing knob, crank real fast 8 - 10 time with a short throw (not much room) and you're all done. Even with a standard wrench - reaching the socket reverser isn't that hard - and then the lock handle can be moved standing up with no cusswords. Think about it, and get back to me with the answer, willya?
Thanks again for the warp-drive table height adjustmenet.
When I started woodworking, I didn't know squat. I have progressed in 30 years - now I do know squat.
So guys, is this just to speed up the travel or can you use it to increase the travel of the press? for example can you drill 20 inches deep if your bit is big enough just by advancinf the material up into the spinning bit.
I have a thread in the turners section about using a lathe to drill a gunstock blank. The lathe becomes a horizontal drill press. Trouble is a lathe takes up alot of floor space and would only get used for that purpose alone. I was going to get a floor drill press anyway so if this is doable then it saves some floor space. What is more important than that?
I assume you would have to find a way to keep the table straight while it is raising. Or to the floor dp's have lock on that?
Last edited by Doug Carpenter; 06-23-2010 at 1:07 AM. Reason: my "s" were all "a"
I thought I had better check into this further so to not run afoul of the mods. The policy states that they DO NOT allow links to other forums to be posted. I doubt it would make much difference if it were in hyperlink format or not. I might not be posting a link in the most technical sense, but "mods are gods" and I doubt they would let me off on a technicality. To keep myself in good standing at SMC, I will email the link to anyone who wants it.
The link prohibition is primarily about linking to other forums or site from which the poster may profit, such as a link to the poster's ebay for-sale item. AFAIK there's no problem with linking to manufacturer's sites as long as the poster doesn't benefit financially. I've posted Ebay items numbers (but not as a link) and not gotten deleted. Ebay links are verboten.
Curt, If you read Keith's posting here
http://www.sawmillcreek.org/showthread.php?t=119252
it's a little more complicated than that. The reasons links to other forums are banned goes beyond commercial or profit considerations. The problem isn't posting a link to a Surplus Center page for the motor. It's posting the link to the forum on which I had previously posted this idea. Apparently SMC mods have enough to do policing SMC without having to worry about what someone might link to in another forum over which they have no control.