Hello folks.
I've been reading this forum for a few weeks now and am humbled at the wonderful resource available here. I only wish I had found it sooner. The time has finally arrived for me to sign up and join your community.
A bit about me. I have been around woodwork of varying degrees for the last 12 years, making simple furniture mostly from pine, second fix carpentry and quite a lot of kitchen installations. The time has come for me to expand on my skills and start making furniture out of hardwoods.
This change in direction has been prompted by inheriting the use of my fathers workshop. It has all of the tools I should need to begin making some furniture, with the only notable absence being a spindle moulder and lathe.
Included on the inventory for the workshop is a Scheppach 2600ci Planer/Thicknesser. The machine is 2 or 3 years old but has never been assembled and used. I spent yesterday cleaning off all of the protective machine oil coating and assembling it ready for use. I gained experience last year using an old Wadkin Bursgreen Planer/Thicknesser, this was my first time using a planer/thicknesser and I familiarised myself with the set up and use of it during the 8 or so months I had access to it. Whilst old, it was a very well engineered, solid machine and this was proven by it's reliability. I think it's fair to say that the Scheppach isn't quite in the same league as the Wadkin in terms of it's engineering, thats not to say that there is anything bad with the Scheppach, it's still a very capable machine. The fence is alloy as opposed to solid cast steel and unlike the Wadkin, you have to lift the outfeed table up out of the way to use the thicknesser underneath. The machine is sitting on a firm, stable and level floor. After carefully assembling the machine and running a few pieces of timber both over the planer and through the thicknesser there appears to be a couple of problems. Reading the instructions over and over doesn't shed any light on resolving them.
The first problem is snipe. As the timber passes from the infeed table to the outfeed table it drops fractionally onto the cutterblock leaving a scallop in the end of the timber. The infeed table is at it's highest setting to remove the smallest amount of material for each pass. The outfeed table doesn't appear to have any height or level adjustment to it at all, except for a single threaded stud on the underside of the opposite side to where it's hinged and close to the cutterblock. I can't lift the outfeed any higher to get it level with top dead centre of the blades in the cutterblock. The only way I can see of eliminating the snipe is to drop the blades lower into the cutterblock, although they are pretty low down already. Is this the best way to overcome this problem? Does anyone else have the same machine and experience the same problem?
The other problem is when passing timber over the planer, it is not coming off with a perfect right angle. The fence is set to exactly 90 degrees with my engineers square to the infeed and outfeed tables. The planer blades are set parallel in the cutter block and this is confirmed when I thickness a piece of timber as it is coming out with both faces parallel to each other. Would the best way to overcome this be to set the fence to say +/- 1 degree to 90 degrees and get the timber square coming off the outfeed table? With such little adjustment on the tables I'm not really sure what else to do.
Apologies for the long post, I hope I have explained myself clearly enough to allow you to help me with this.
Once this problem is solved I hope to contribute to the forum with my activities in the workshop which will hopefully include a workbench and tool cabinet WIP as well as various furniture items I have already been asked to make.
I have learned much already from reading many topics on this forum and I look forward to learning more and maybe one day being able to help others.
Many thanks in advance.
I've been reading this forum for a few weeks now and am humbled at the wonderful resource available here. I only wish I had found it sooner. The time has finally arrived for me to sign up and join your community.
A bit about me. I have been around woodwork of varying degrees for the last 12 years, making simple furniture mostly from pine, second fix carpentry and quite a lot of kitchen installations. The time has come for me to expand on my skills and start making furniture out of hardwoods.
This change in direction has been prompted by inheriting the use of my fathers workshop. It has all of the tools I should need to begin making some furniture, with the only notable absence being a spindle moulder and lathe.
Included on the inventory for the workshop is a Scheppach 2600ci Planer/Thicknesser. The machine is 2 or 3 years old but has never been assembled and used. I spent yesterday cleaning off all of the protective machine oil coating and assembling it ready for use. I gained experience last year using an old Wadkin Bursgreen Planer/Thicknesser, this was my first time using a planer/thicknesser and I familiarised myself with the set up and use of it during the 8 or so months I had access to it. Whilst old, it was a very well engineered, solid machine and this was proven by it's reliability. I think it's fair to say that the Scheppach isn't quite in the same league as the Wadkin in terms of it's engineering, thats not to say that there is anything bad with the Scheppach, it's still a very capable machine. The fence is alloy as opposed to solid cast steel and unlike the Wadkin, you have to lift the outfeed table up out of the way to use the thicknesser underneath. The machine is sitting on a firm, stable and level floor. After carefully assembling the machine and running a few pieces of timber both over the planer and through the thicknesser there appears to be a couple of problems. Reading the instructions over and over doesn't shed any light on resolving them.
The first problem is snipe. As the timber passes from the infeed table to the outfeed table it drops fractionally onto the cutterblock leaving a scallop in the end of the timber. The infeed table is at it's highest setting to remove the smallest amount of material for each pass. The outfeed table doesn't appear to have any height or level adjustment to it at all, except for a single threaded stud on the underside of the opposite side to where it's hinged and close to the cutterblock. I can't lift the outfeed any higher to get it level with top dead centre of the blades in the cutterblock. The only way I can see of eliminating the snipe is to drop the blades lower into the cutterblock, although they are pretty low down already. Is this the best way to overcome this problem? Does anyone else have the same machine and experience the same problem?
The other problem is when passing timber over the planer, it is not coming off with a perfect right angle. The fence is set to exactly 90 degrees with my engineers square to the infeed and outfeed tables. The planer blades are set parallel in the cutter block and this is confirmed when I thickness a piece of timber as it is coming out with both faces parallel to each other. Would the best way to overcome this be to set the fence to say +/- 1 degree to 90 degrees and get the timber square coming off the outfeed table? With such little adjustment on the tables I'm not really sure what else to do.
Apologies for the long post, I hope I have explained myself clearly enough to allow you to help me with this.
Once this problem is solved I hope to contribute to the forum with my activities in the workshop which will hopefully include a workbench and tool cabinet WIP as well as various furniture items I have already been asked to make.
I have learned much already from reading many topics on this forum and I look forward to learning more and maybe one day being able to help others.
Many thanks in advance.