I guess I have to use my first post here to brag as well then.
A colleague mentioned that as he was having to make space in his garage he was getting rid of some equipment, and asked if I wanted his bandsaw. Apparently he'd found it in a bing-and-buy a few years ago (paid £25 for it) but if I wanted it I could have it for a pint. I was expecting some bit of Machinemart or B&Q tat, but what arrived was the machine shown below.
According to the data plate it's a french-built 1998 Euro 205 (342.205.01). It has no fences, and I'm guessing there's a block missing that should bolt across the front of the slot in the table to stiffen it up, but neither is a significant problem to knock up as my workshop has a lathe and a small mill. It currently has a standard 1/4" blade of around 20tpi (a guess), and it slices through 15mm chipboard shelving like a knife through butter (and 4x2 pine like a knife through chedder), with a pretty good surface finish. In fact I was so entranced by this that I made a temporary fence using some alloy angle and a couple of G-clamps and spent a few minutes delighting in the way I could cut 6mm, then 3mm and finally 1mm slices off that pine block to make 2" wide strips that look like they've been planed!
The blade guides are a close to the end of their lives, but I'm thinking of making a mount for ballrace guides, probably turning the thrust race through 90deg so that the blade rides on the outer race rather than on the side of it - I know a lot of bandsaws have a sideways thrust race but it just feels wrong to me. Does anyone have any views on ballrace vs solid guides? I have some lignum vitae I could easily make solid guides from if required, but I don't understand why ballraces aren't "better".
I'm thinking of getting some new blades for it - probably another 1/4" carbon steel "hobby" blade in about 12tpi, and a 1/4" bimetal one in 20tpi for cutting aluminium (and maybe even the odd bit of mild steel). I know these machines are normally only spec'd for 1/4, 3/8 and 1/2" blades, but is there any reason why I couldn't fit a 1/8" one for detail work?
Finally - does anyone know where I could get a copy of the manual (paper or scannned)? It would be useful to have an exploded diagram and the recommended procedures for things like blade changing, tensioning and alignment, lubrication etc. I notice the machine has a tension indicator, but I have no idea what setting I'm looking for...
All help appreciated, and sorry to ask so many questions in my first post here.
Pete