Tune Up Update...............
Spent this afternoon making sure that the blade was completly verticle from the side and the front. Part of this involved making sure that the arm was parallel with the table and a tweak of the large knob on the back of the arm soon did this. The adjustment of the virtical blade from the front involved moving that tiny grub screw, mentioned earlier IN just a tad to move it slightly right and line it up.
Next was the vertical from the side, which involved turning the motor by gently loostening the three screws holding it in just enough for the motor to be turned.
Moving it anti-clockwise in my case (yours may be different) just about a full screw position. If you look closely, you can see the pencil mark I put around the original position,(in line with the bolt- click on the image) , which I would suggest is a good idea for anyone before moving the motor. With the blade is moving at it's slowest setting, gently turn the motor whilst observing the side vertical stroke of the blade. As it comes into the correct position, the motor is even quieter. Then lock it off, and it should remain correctly positioned, but worth checking occassionally.
I did not feel happy with loading to blade into the lower clamp, as it can be pushed down too low, leaving not enough blade to reach position on the top clamp. Looking at the entrance of the clamp, it apeared to allow the blade to move down as far as you allowed it, so I decided to have a closer look by removing the clamp. Two bolts hold it in place
and by carefully removing these, the clamp can be freed, but be careful that the two small bushes do not drop out of the arms.
In fact the blade slot does have a stop position, just below the tightening peg and the grub screw, but if the blade is not delivered vertically, this can be missed and the blade then travels as low as it wishes. I decided to put in a second stop to prevent this and a small wooden splinter with super-glue was enough.
with that in place, it should make it easier to load the blade, for me at least, so I then fitted the clamp back in place.
With the blade now completly virtical, I decided to test this with a block of wood, cutting a small grove and thenmoving that cut behind the blade to make sure it fitted the same slot, which it did.
I then thought I would try a 2" block of pine, just to see how it coped. Low and behold, the hold-down clamp will not allow that size of work as it gets in the way at its maximum height, so it needed removing. WOW... that's a manufacturers fault.
Anyway, heres the cut
So that's it for today.
Malcolm