• If you have bought, sold or gained information from our Classifieds, please donate to UK Workshop and give back.

    You can become a Supporting Member or just click here to donate.

Wanted AGS 10 Parallelogram Riving Knife Mounting Bracket

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

samweb132

Established Member
Joined
11 Aug 2024
Messages
46
Reaction score
11
Location
Edinburgh
Long Shot but looking to see if anyone has a spare mounting Bracket for the parallelogram version of the mounting bracket, I have attached a manual that has a breakdown of the bracket Parts 151-156 on page 36 and 37 or if anyone has any other ideas on how to mount the riving knife, i have the side plate and link plate just no bracket to attach the riving knife with.
 

Attachments

  • 173351-431cce01d929cd08e34c1c320a5b7323.pdf
    2.1 MB
Based on what you read in the thread to which you link, make a drawing of the parts.

Indicate clearly which parts you think would be difficult. In posts above and in the linked one, specific part numbers are used but then you go all hand-wavy with "studs that hold the bracket and knife square".

I think you are referring to part 153. There are alternative designs possible not using studs that would achieve the same end (like making the part from solid)

Note that part 151 is described in your manual as M8 but in the link above as M6, so you are best placed with your own machine to determine what is correct.

For all parts, you could 3D print prototypes to verify dimensions, or even, shock horror for a woodworking forum, make them out of cellulose-based material.
 
Based on what you read in the thread to which you link, make a drawing of the parts.

Indicate clearly which parts you think would be difficult. In posts above and in the linked one, specific part numbers are used but then you go all hand-wavy with "studs that hold the bracket and knife square".

I think you are referring to part 153. There are alternative designs possible not using studs that would achieve the same end (like making the part from solid)

Note that part 151 is described in your manual as M8 but in the link above as M6, so you are best placed with your own machine to determine what is correct.

For all parts, you could 3D print prototypes to verify dimensions, or even, shock horror for a woodworking forum, make them out of cellulose-based material.
Apologies I'm all over the place this morning. Realising now that i should manage to retrofit something on my own with a bit of tinkering.
 
Back
Top