andrew_2
Established Member
Hi all
If anyone has any advice, that would be much appreciated.
It's a Record 020c.
I was generally scraping rust off and the adjuster knob wasn't turning. I soaked it in WD40 and it ran upwards on the thread after some persuasion and then it wouldn't go down again. I got it to the top of the thread and then had to use some light force with a wrench to get the knob off. I wasn't overdoing it.
I can't see any damage to the thread, but it looks like I've chipped the casting at the beginning of the turn. As far as I can see, the inside screw thread looks fine, but it will NOT go back on again with just hand pressure - about one turn and then it jams. So I reckon I must have warped the casting or bent the casting's internal thread somehow. The threaded rod is straight and all the threads are clean and parallel.
What I'm wondering is whether I can force the knob back on the thread and then paint some grinding paste above and below, screw it up and down the thread a few times until it runs acceptably well? On the basis that even if it ends up a bit sloppy, that would be better than having to bin the plane? Would that work, or can someone suggest a better way of doing it?
I'm not going to be able to get a spare knob or threaded rod without buying a whole plane on ebay, sadly. I don't know of anyone local to me who could tap a new thread into the knob.
Thanks,
Andrew
If anyone has any advice, that would be much appreciated.
It's a Record 020c.
I was generally scraping rust off and the adjuster knob wasn't turning. I soaked it in WD40 and it ran upwards on the thread after some persuasion and then it wouldn't go down again. I got it to the top of the thread and then had to use some light force with a wrench to get the knob off. I wasn't overdoing it.
I can't see any damage to the thread, but it looks like I've chipped the casting at the beginning of the turn. As far as I can see, the inside screw thread looks fine, but it will NOT go back on again with just hand pressure - about one turn and then it jams. So I reckon I must have warped the casting or bent the casting's internal thread somehow. The threaded rod is straight and all the threads are clean and parallel.
What I'm wondering is whether I can force the knob back on the thread and then paint some grinding paste above and below, screw it up and down the thread a few times until it runs acceptably well? On the basis that even if it ends up a bit sloppy, that would be better than having to bin the plane? Would that work, or can someone suggest a better way of doing it?
I'm not going to be able to get a spare knob or threaded rod without buying a whole plane on ebay, sadly. I don't know of anyone local to me who could tap a new thread into the knob.
Thanks,
Andrew