The first time I created this post it went into a state of limbo and never actually appeared on the forum, or what's new, but it did exist in my content, so I will try again and forgive me if the post suddenly appears twice!
Does anyone have experience of the Bursgreen FS2 (pre Wadkin). I am refurbishing one and need to remove the tables. The rise/fall shafts are gummed up with years of rubbish and not moving as easily as they should. It looks fairly straightforward, just 4 bolts on each table. The planer has a parallelogram rise/fall design. There doesn't seem to be any method of adjusting the table alignment, apart from up and down, so I think the mating faces of the beds and parallelogram mechanism are just machined, hopefully no shims or anything like that. The tables are currently perfectly aligned along the length. If there were shims, I would not remove the tables, but find another way to lubricate all the parallelogram shafts.
Since originally writing this, I have cleaned inside the machine with a high pressure hose and couldn't believe how much old rubbish was inside the machine. It was packed around the parallelogram mechanism and that was responsible for some of the problem of it not moving well. It now moves freely oven a good few mm (~5mm height) of travel but still will not fall freely. I doubt I would ever be taking as much as that off, so probably OK now, but I do like to to fix things and have them working properly.
The blades are skewed with a spring on the gibb and blade, of course the planer didn't come with a setting tool. What is the best method for setting skewed blades? I have found some information on-line, some use Dial gauge, any other ways?
Thanks
Sandy
Does anyone have experience of the Bursgreen FS2 (pre Wadkin). I am refurbishing one and need to remove the tables. The rise/fall shafts are gummed up with years of rubbish and not moving as easily as they should. It looks fairly straightforward, just 4 bolts on each table. The planer has a parallelogram rise/fall design. There doesn't seem to be any method of adjusting the table alignment, apart from up and down, so I think the mating faces of the beds and parallelogram mechanism are just machined, hopefully no shims or anything like that. The tables are currently perfectly aligned along the length. If there were shims, I would not remove the tables, but find another way to lubricate all the parallelogram shafts.
Since originally writing this, I have cleaned inside the machine with a high pressure hose and couldn't believe how much old rubbish was inside the machine. It was packed around the parallelogram mechanism and that was responsible for some of the problem of it not moving well. It now moves freely oven a good few mm (~5mm height) of travel but still will not fall freely. I doubt I would ever be taking as much as that off, so probably OK now, but I do like to to fix things and have them working properly.
The blades are skewed with a spring on the gibb and blade, of course the planer didn't come with a setting tool. What is the best method for setting skewed blades? I have found some information on-line, some use Dial gauge, any other ways?
Thanks
Sandy