I recently bought a 2nd hand Multico BS. I also bought Steve Maskery's DVD's on bandsaws.
The saw guide were solid blocks so I bought the Axi replacement system an with one or two minor hassles fitted them.
One thing I'm having difficulty with is setting the side bearings. Steve uses a bit of paper to set the gap, but what he doesn't say is if the bearings are expected to run all the time or just click round a little as the blade goes passed. Now I can set the guides so that the bearings run all the time, or I can set them a fraction further out so that the blade hits each one randomly about half a dozen times each full circuit. What is correct ? Or perhaps a new good blade runs so true there actually isn't any middle ground as I am seeing.
Not that there is realistically any adjustment for this but what sort of accuracy is expected for the guide raising and lowering mechanism. If this is not truly parallel with the blade, then any guide setting at say the bottom, will not be correct when the guides are at the top. I appreciate this does depend a bit on the quality of the saw, but a ball-park figure for blade deviation would be interesting.
Thanks for any help
Rob
The saw guide were solid blocks so I bought the Axi replacement system an with one or two minor hassles fitted them.
One thing I'm having difficulty with is setting the side bearings. Steve uses a bit of paper to set the gap, but what he doesn't say is if the bearings are expected to run all the time or just click round a little as the blade goes passed. Now I can set the guides so that the bearings run all the time, or I can set them a fraction further out so that the blade hits each one randomly about half a dozen times each full circuit. What is correct ? Or perhaps a new good blade runs so true there actually isn't any middle ground as I am seeing.
Not that there is realistically any adjustment for this but what sort of accuracy is expected for the guide raising and lowering mechanism. If this is not truly parallel with the blade, then any guide setting at say the bottom, will not be correct when the guides are at the top. I appreciate this does depend a bit on the quality of the saw, but a ball-park figure for blade deviation would be interesting.
Thanks for any help
Rob