Page 8 of 8 FirstFirst ... 45678
Results 106 to 120 of 133

Thread: Are your tools dangerous?

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Princeton, NJ
    Posts
    7,308
    Blog Entries
    7
    Quote Originally Posted by Edward Weber View Post
    If I may ask, what air clamps do you use?
    I made the clamps using Bimba cylinders.
    Bumbling forward into the unknown.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    NE Ohio
    Posts
    7,048
    I don't consider my tools as being dangerous.
    I do treat them as though they are though.
    I believe that's called - respect.

    Sort of like our Coon Hound/ Great Pyrenees mix Quigley. Friendly as can be - right up to the point you get in between him and some turkey. The dog goes insane when there's turkey around. You have to respect the fact that he's 105 pounds of turkey-induced-frenzy.
    "Life is what happens to you while you're busy making other plans." - John Lennon

  3. #3
    Quote Originally Posted by Rich Engelhardt View Post
    I don't consider my tools as being dangerous.
    I do treat them as though they are though.
    I believe that's called - respect.
    Exactly, this is the way

  4. #4
    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Holcombe View Post
    I made the clamps using Bimba cylinders.
    Thanks, I'll look into them

  5. #5
    Quote Originally Posted by Joe Calhoon View Post
    Vielen Dank, Joe, das ist das beste Dokument, das ich je gesehen habe!

    So glad you posted this, I've been glossing over some very interesting stuff the last few days.
    Certainly miles better than the UK HSE documents I've linked to.
    Lots of stuff to go through, which I've not got the chance to research yet,
    as many things mentioned are certainly worthy of a thread of it's own

    To say it's very much appreciated, would be an understatement,
    Cheers

    All the best
    Tom

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2008
    Location
    Ouray Colorado
    Posts
    1,405
    Agree with Brian about the air clamps, makes everything a more predictable operation. I do a few off line rips on the short stroke slider but if I didn’t have the straight line rip would be doing them on the large format slider or the bandsaw a Brian does. Used a Unisaw for ripping many years and don’t miss that.
    Warren, the lady with the hand on the blade guard is running a swing saw. Quite a different animal than the radial. I recently got rid of my crappy Dewalt radial that I used only for rough cutting. It was convenient for production but a little dangerous. To save the blade on the Graule using the chain saw with a jig now.
    also never liked mitering on the chop saw. Even the Omga. Prefer the Double miter on the slider. Good that it throws the small off cuts away from the operator.
    Last edited by Joe Calhoon; 04-03-2024 at 12:23 PM.

  7. #7
    Years ago I did testing with different knife heights. The higher I went then more noise and I could feel the knives more. This was General stuff so lighter machines smaller heads and thinner knives. I decided on a knife projection of .050. When I got SCM stuff I just went with that rather than what ever the last owners were using. Probably should have dropped rollers but didn't but can at any time.

    The SCM stuff worked great with the same knife projection. The machines were heavier, heads were larger, knives were thicker.

    Reading your info I see the projection I arrived at was .0057 different than the Tersa. So the German knife projection recommendation on high speed steel and Tersa is the same. Tersa emailed me back and said 1mm, I emailed this and they said they had not seen it and figured it was correct.

    Here is your info. 2a is high speed steel, 2b is tersa.

    I stopped using wood and went to a dial long ago so I could set to a number every time and have always set to .050 which is one full rotation of that model Dial.

    1.1 mm Knife Projection is .043.jpg
    Last edited by Warren Lake; 04-04-2024 at 12:21 PM.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Toronto Ontario
    Posts
    11,287
    Hi Warren, you probably already know this however 1.1mm is the maximum allowable knife projection for hand fed machines (MAN rated) in the EU.

    A shaper with a feeder still requires MAN rated tooling in the EU as the shaper could be hand fed by not using the feeder.

    Regards, Rod.

  9. #9
    No I didnt. I'm from a different time. Ive hand fed and power fed old school tooling for a long time. I get new stuff minimizes snatch. Proper set up was fine on old school tooling.

    The German info does not say maximum or less than it only states 1.1 one so i took that as that is what those are both set to. Maybe in the German writing it says other wise. Id have to send it to some friends to translate if so but the picture should be fine. On my own I already determined that number as working the best for me.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •