Megaweasel
Established Member
Hi all,
I have a Record/ Minimax C26 universal but find I rarely use the sliding table these days, favouring my track saw for panels and Kapex for cross-cutting duties and i rarely use the Spindle moulder. I’d like a planer with a (quiet) helical cutter rather than the straight Tersa blades so started thinking about a change to a small table saw and a stand-alone planner/thickneser.
At least that was my logical reasoning - really, i think I just wanted an excuse to buy an ancient table saw as a restoration project - hence after watching a few on eBay and a good bit of negotiation and van hire, I have a nice Wadkin Bursgreen AGS 10 (or possibly AGS250) table saw of I think 1977 vintage.
looks terrible at the moment but its actually in pretty good nick - its complete, no cracks in the cast iron, no missing teeth, rise-and-fall works nicely, tilt works nicely, tops looks great, so all good. Had a large custom dust chute fitted (see pic) which I hope to remove and replace with something a bit more ‘modern’ around the blade.
Anyway, initially what I need to do is get a motor and fire it up. It came with a 2 hp, 2800 rpm 3 phase motor which seems to be of the same vintage as the saw (Newman). It’s 400V and not capable of being configured to Delta - at least not without stripping and doing scary wiring mods that I really don’t want to try myself.
So I need a motor and I’ve spent a good many hours researching and reading up on VFD’s etc. I get it for adapting a drill press or lathe to add variable speed and perhaps DC braking for rapid deceleration but given I’ve got to buy something, are there any real reasons why investing in a Delta 3-phase 240 v motor and VFD would be a better idea than buying a new single-phase motor?
I can get a ‘period’ 3-phase that will work for around 100 quid, or a new one for perhaps 150 quid. VFDs (Chinese) seem to be around 80 quid or so - so £180 to £230 or so for the VFD - then it needs mounting and wiring to use stop/start and emergency stop.
Lots of options for single phase motors - period one that looks nice or a new one. Simple to use and wire with a new NVR.
So - bit long and windy, but any reasons to go VFD for a table saw resto when buying from scratch?
I have a Record/ Minimax C26 universal but find I rarely use the sliding table these days, favouring my track saw for panels and Kapex for cross-cutting duties and i rarely use the Spindle moulder. I’d like a planer with a (quiet) helical cutter rather than the straight Tersa blades so started thinking about a change to a small table saw and a stand-alone planner/thickneser.
At least that was my logical reasoning - really, i think I just wanted an excuse to buy an ancient table saw as a restoration project - hence after watching a few on eBay and a good bit of negotiation and van hire, I have a nice Wadkin Bursgreen AGS 10 (or possibly AGS250) table saw of I think 1977 vintage.
looks terrible at the moment but its actually in pretty good nick - its complete, no cracks in the cast iron, no missing teeth, rise-and-fall works nicely, tilt works nicely, tops looks great, so all good. Had a large custom dust chute fitted (see pic) which I hope to remove and replace with something a bit more ‘modern’ around the blade.
Anyway, initially what I need to do is get a motor and fire it up. It came with a 2 hp, 2800 rpm 3 phase motor which seems to be of the same vintage as the saw (Newman). It’s 400V and not capable of being configured to Delta - at least not without stripping and doing scary wiring mods that I really don’t want to try myself.
So I need a motor and I’ve spent a good many hours researching and reading up on VFD’s etc. I get it for adapting a drill press or lathe to add variable speed and perhaps DC braking for rapid deceleration but given I’ve got to buy something, are there any real reasons why investing in a Delta 3-phase 240 v motor and VFD would be a better idea than buying a new single-phase motor?
I can get a ‘period’ 3-phase that will work for around 100 quid, or a new one for perhaps 150 quid. VFDs (Chinese) seem to be around 80 quid or so - so £180 to £230 or so for the VFD - then it needs mounting and wiring to use stop/start and emergency stop.
Lots of options for single phase motors - period one that looks nice or a new one. Simple to use and wire with a new NVR.
So - bit long and windy, but any reasons to go VFD for a table saw resto when buying from scratch?