TrimTheKing":1htjkf0u said:
One thing that I am struggling to get my head around is the use of a metal jig to set a metal blade!!! Surely the edges are susceptible to damage doing it this way???
I can understand that. What I really don't like about it is how lightweight it is, which sometimes makes it difficult to keep enough pressure on the knives with one hand as you try to tighten the nuts with the other. If you look at the jigs for most industrial machines, they weight a tonne!
I've also got a pair of those magnetic jigs... Rutlands sell them under the 'Dakota' name and Record Power do their own. However, Axminster sell them for only
half of what those two are asking! :shock: I'm now a fan of these jigs. I can see how they work but, they're not strong enough, in my opinion. I always find I have to give them a push to get the knives in all the way, which means the brass feet get scratched and scarred.
TrimTheKing":1htjkf0u said:
Thing with this is, you still need to move your extraction to the other side regardless, and this is the bit that pi$$es me off more than actually lifting the tables. I am even considering getting a Camvac or similar to sit specifically by the PT just for this as it really gets me to have to spin the machine on its wheel just to get extraction. If I get another vac then I can take it off its wheel set and not have to worry.
The trouble here is that almost all machines are like this. I also have to rotate the machine 180º but, that's largely due to the nature of my narrow workshop; the up-ended tables would also get in my way. I'd get another chip collector off eBay or something, if you were serious (the bigger, the better with this machine's extraction!! :wink
. Camvac's look good but I bet they fill up with shavings in no time! Plus, you probably wouldn't realise until it was too late and it was all backing up inside the hose. :?
Another thing I've noticed is that, when the hood is flipped over the you locate the black tab over that pin, for some reason, the shavings seem to hit the roof of the hood (you can hear it - ping, ping ping...). But, if I simply rest the tab on top of the pin, this doesn't happen and yet, the efficiency is still about the same.