HI Again,
Jim, Douglas ,Steve and Woodbloke (i used a small plank of wood (hammer) ), thanksfor the replies, interestingly last time i was on here i had trouble with a 3 phase Jet JWBS 18 bandsaw i bought cheap from a college clearance(£500 + free Axminster twin motor dust extractor) got it sorted and its served me well so far.
Heres what i did today:
1) stripped it all down as advised and cleaned it.
2) Checked the wheel tyres and cleaned them ,they do slope slightly to the outside in the last third of the tyre where the blades been riding.
I may swap the tyres around later so the flat side is where the blade rides??? Not sure if its a good idea?
3) Checked the fit of the wheels on the spindles and tried to get them co-planar. This was alot of fiddling about. The upper wheel i noticed had bearings front and back.The back one was very loose for some strange reason and when the wheel is pushed on the spindle the rear bearing slipped forward so that it was butting against the front bearing. This could cause some wobble so i removed the rear bearing,slipped some loose washer on and then the bearing to stop the bearing moving forward and staying in place. The wheel seemed less wobbly .
The bottom wheel was around 5- 6mm behind the top wheel so had to be moved forward loosening the grub screw as Steve mentioned.
One thing i noticed was that the bottom wheel was a very loose fit on the motor spindle and wobbled quite badly when shaken with the hand from side to side.I solved this by slipping some steel shim in the wheel bore so that it was all around the spindle apart from where the key block went. The first shim itried was still slack,the second as well but the third was tight and i had to use a mallet to gently tap it on into the position where it was about as co-planar as i could get it.The best i could do was with both edges of the top wheel and the bottom of the bottom wheel co-planar. The to edge of the bottom wheel was slightly in towards the back of the machine. Dont know why this was ??
I noticed that the lower wheel seemed to turn with a slighlt side to side wobble despite it being tight on the spindle , whilst trying to get the wheel back off which would now not budge using a small plank of wood,the wheel must have bent slightly or something as now the wheel was spinning perfectly without the side to side wobble. I dont if this was with just the pressure of the wood on the aluminium wheel or what???
4) The blade that the saw came with was a 1/2" fine tooth blade. I got it to track with the teeth just over the edge on the bottom and about 1/8" in from the edge on the top wheel. No matter how many times i adjuster it it was the best i got..
5 ) i put a new 3/8" blade from Tuffsaws on and the tracking was similar. Funny thing is the tension seemed to have more effect on the tracking than the adjusting knurled nuts at the top rear of the saw.When the tension was at about 4 1/2 on the inbuilt scale the balde tracked ok. If it was turned any higher it slipped off the bottom wheel. :x
6) I had noticed that there was three door closing knobs .I assumed the stand off bar was missing on mine on the side next to the switch as there was a little threaded screw about an inch long. I was wrong the screw isnt even in line with the rear knob so the rear knob was in fact just a dummy knob?????? When the saw was switch on the rear of the door casing vibrated and moved out triggering the door switch and turning the saw off.
I drilled a hole in the rear of the saw inline with the third knob (this knob ,though a dummy was thread inside the same as the other two).
I then cut a coach bolt to the right length ,put nuts on the inside to secure it and the knob now works great. Much less vibration.
Ive read on other forums that some of these saws had only two knobs ,this seems like a transitional model in between a 2 and 3 knob door casing.
7) The fastening on the edge of the table where the slot for getting the blade in was missing on this saw,more vibration!. I cut a strip of gauge plate and drilled two holes in it and bolted it to the table. This worked and even less vibration.
8) there was a strange sheet metal part bolted to the side of the saw under the table, i removed this object?????Anyone??
9) Guildes all seemed fine apart from the blocks were rather chewed up so i just reversed these.
10) Started saw up and cuts fine with very little vibration, a pound coin on edge just sort of vibrates around a little but didnt fall over. It is less noisy as well. Im quite quite pleased with it now but wish the blades were tracking similarly on each wheel.The manual states the blade teeth should just hang over the edge,but i`d rather a 1/4" blade (which i havent tried yet ) would ride a little in from the edge, seems a safer idea!
Heres some photos of said saw!
Table isnt flat not sure what to do about that yet.Its flat from front to back in the direction you would push wood through.The side of the table on the motor side is flat until it approached the cut out and carrying on to the other side has a mound?
Overall i feel that when these saws moved production to France ,even if the casting was the same, the overall fitting out of the parts wasnt done to as high a tolerance. I used to have a Mikron Swiss metal lathe and the tolerances on this and parts from different machine which fitted perfectly was amazing.