condeesteso
Established Member
Well, I think it's a Kity. No branding anywhere I can find, but the rating plate says type: 0413, date 1999.
I found this by accident and was planning getting an Inca, but this came up so I went to see it (better than buying blind on ebay).
Basically it's a cast ali main frame, and in fact every significant component is aluminium. The main cover is thick vac-formed plastic. Table is cast ali, ribbed under.
The wheels are ali again, factory balanced (note small drill indents at perimiter) and fixed to shafts very nicely - without stripping down (no intention) I guess an interference fit on shaft, maybe with a flat or splines, and a beefy circlip to retain. There is no play at all in either bearing and the wheels spin very smoothly indeed.
Drive is indirect via a vee belt, tension can be adjusted by shifting the motor mount plate.
Guides are all tool-free adjustment, with solid sides and roller rear (same top and bottom). The side guides were replaced instantly with Lignum (8mm square) and when I got it it had some old beech guides in anyway. The lignum zero-clearance guides work brilliantly, in firm contact to the blade, self-lubricating, almost no wear.
Table tilts and the trunnion assembly is solid enough:
With a new blade fitted (Tuff premium 1/2" 4tpi) a quick test - 6" sawn oak:
Speed of cut was very impressive (complements to the blade, with an impeccable weld). So this is right on its capacity limits, no problems at all. The offcut is uneven only because the stock was rough sawn and not squared up - the cut is flat and clean.
The fence slightly puzzles me - the measure on the fence support has indications for an L section fence, but this one looks very like a fence I saw on a bigger 613. The underside fouled the table slightly so was filed to clear. The lock-down slide is a bit graunchy along the mount rail - I think aluminium bearing on aluminium is often not good - it needs a tune to get it smoother.
Dust extraction is the main issue - it isn't good enough and dust gathers inside, finding its way onto the lower wheel band quite quickly.
I've seen 4" ports cut into the plastic cover, but before I go that far I am going to tune what is there already... just to see if it can be improved enough. here it is with the shute removed
I am in the process of fitting a rubber zero-clearance gate under the table, fixed to the plastic frame where it surrounds the blade. Made from thin rubber sheet, bonded on. I will then file the inside of the extract shute, as it has a crude flat plate where the internal weld is, and that must restrict flow but more importantly cause a lot of turbulence, which is the airflow equivalent of friction.
I'll report back on extraction, but I'm keen to get the smaller hose size working well as I plan to use the smaller vac on this, which shifts plenty enough air to do this job (in theory).
One final note - the slot in the table infeed is fixed by a countersunk allen bolt. When I checked the machine before buying, table was concave on the infeed but dead flat on outfeed. Turned out the screw was over-tightened, causing distortion in the infeed. Once that was slackened to just tight, the table returned to dead flat all over. And I need to not lose that bolt!
Early impressions - very good indeed, got me interested in an early 613 now!
I found this by accident and was planning getting an Inca, but this came up so I went to see it (better than buying blind on ebay).
Basically it's a cast ali main frame, and in fact every significant component is aluminium. The main cover is thick vac-formed plastic. Table is cast ali, ribbed under.
The wheels are ali again, factory balanced (note small drill indents at perimiter) and fixed to shafts very nicely - without stripping down (no intention) I guess an interference fit on shaft, maybe with a flat or splines, and a beefy circlip to retain. There is no play at all in either bearing and the wheels spin very smoothly indeed.
Drive is indirect via a vee belt, tension can be adjusted by shifting the motor mount plate.
Guides are all tool-free adjustment, with solid sides and roller rear (same top and bottom). The side guides were replaced instantly with Lignum (8mm square) and when I got it it had some old beech guides in anyway. The lignum zero-clearance guides work brilliantly, in firm contact to the blade, self-lubricating, almost no wear.
Table tilts and the trunnion assembly is solid enough:
With a new blade fitted (Tuff premium 1/2" 4tpi) a quick test - 6" sawn oak:
Speed of cut was very impressive (complements to the blade, with an impeccable weld). So this is right on its capacity limits, no problems at all. The offcut is uneven only because the stock was rough sawn and not squared up - the cut is flat and clean.
The fence slightly puzzles me - the measure on the fence support has indications for an L section fence, but this one looks very like a fence I saw on a bigger 613. The underside fouled the table slightly so was filed to clear. The lock-down slide is a bit graunchy along the mount rail - I think aluminium bearing on aluminium is often not good - it needs a tune to get it smoother.
Dust extraction is the main issue - it isn't good enough and dust gathers inside, finding its way onto the lower wheel band quite quickly.
I've seen 4" ports cut into the plastic cover, but before I go that far I am going to tune what is there already... just to see if it can be improved enough. here it is with the shute removed
I am in the process of fitting a rubber zero-clearance gate under the table, fixed to the plastic frame where it surrounds the blade. Made from thin rubber sheet, bonded on. I will then file the inside of the extract shute, as it has a crude flat plate where the internal weld is, and that must restrict flow but more importantly cause a lot of turbulence, which is the airflow equivalent of friction.
I'll report back on extraction, but I'm keen to get the smaller hose size working well as I plan to use the smaller vac on this, which shifts plenty enough air to do this job (in theory).
One final note - the slot in the table infeed is fixed by a countersunk allen bolt. When I checked the machine before buying, table was concave on the infeed but dead flat on outfeed. Turned out the screw was over-tightened, causing distortion in the infeed. Once that was slackened to just tight, the table returned to dead flat all over. And I need to not lose that bolt!
Early impressions - very good indeed, got me interested in an early 613 now!