Just thought i would share a tiny bit of info on these.
I have a really old yellow CCFS scrollsaw, bought it years ago dirt cheap and was looking to buy a new saw, but the equivilent for sale today is around £120ish (seems to be the design of choice for entry level) so thought i would give it a good strip, clean and check over as thats cheaper than either buying a like for like (not worth it!) or paying more for a slightly more fancy one.
In use it worked but was quite noisy with a lot of vibration, not ideal (ie i had to bolt it to the bench to use it for anything).
So on stripping the first point was the motor had a distinct repeating noise, so removed the cover and whilst the bearings felt ok, they could be better so got some on order. they appear to be the same as skateboard wheels (and loads of others) so easy enough to find. the bearings didnt run perfectly smooth, but possibly just age and wear.
Removing everything else there were 2 bearings that sat between the motor and the bottom arm on a plate (#33). Both of these were well past it, one had an obvious failure and was rough as anything and the other moved but needed a lot of effort to spin. So 2 of these bought. Just having issues removing them from their home, so currently soaking in oil to see if it helps. It doesnt help that i cannot see if they fit a specific way or not or if they are just 'in' the hole.
The air bag was split (it had stopped blowing ages ago), had a quick search but google brings nothing of value up so may need to look at other ways to sort - any suggestions anyone?
So I expect the bearings would cause the vibration and the noise as the motor was making some noise but the 2 that had failed would be the biggest noise makers, so hopefully once all put back together it will be a quiet thing again and have many years of use.
Also if anyone else has the similar model the instructions and diagram is https://www.clarkeservice.co.uk/manuals/woodworker/CSS400B_Scroll_Saw.pdf
I have a really old yellow CCFS scrollsaw, bought it years ago dirt cheap and was looking to buy a new saw, but the equivilent for sale today is around £120ish (seems to be the design of choice for entry level) so thought i would give it a good strip, clean and check over as thats cheaper than either buying a like for like (not worth it!) or paying more for a slightly more fancy one.
In use it worked but was quite noisy with a lot of vibration, not ideal (ie i had to bolt it to the bench to use it for anything).
So on stripping the first point was the motor had a distinct repeating noise, so removed the cover and whilst the bearings felt ok, they could be better so got some on order. they appear to be the same as skateboard wheels (and loads of others) so easy enough to find. the bearings didnt run perfectly smooth, but possibly just age and wear.
Removing everything else there were 2 bearings that sat between the motor and the bottom arm on a plate (#33). Both of these were well past it, one had an obvious failure and was rough as anything and the other moved but needed a lot of effort to spin. So 2 of these bought. Just having issues removing them from their home, so currently soaking in oil to see if it helps. It doesnt help that i cannot see if they fit a specific way or not or if they are just 'in' the hole.
The air bag was split (it had stopped blowing ages ago), had a quick search but google brings nothing of value up so may need to look at other ways to sort - any suggestions anyone?
So I expect the bearings would cause the vibration and the noise as the motor was making some noise but the 2 that had failed would be the biggest noise makers, so hopefully once all put back together it will be a quiet thing again and have many years of use.
Also if anyone else has the similar model the instructions and diagram is https://www.clarkeservice.co.uk/manuals/woodworker/CSS400B_Scroll_Saw.pdf