sploo
Somewhat extinguished member
I think the belt is the right sort of length. There's enough travel in the motor that I can have it very loose (looser than I think it should be, but still working) all the way to pretty taught (tighter than I think would be right for such a belt).sunnybob":2u96pwzy said:Its possible its the wrong belt. My 2 month old axminster bandsaw drive belt failed, completely snapped. When I checked its length it was so long that the jockey wheel had the belt bent right back on itself. I got a smaller one locally rather than fit another from then in case it was the same over length.
Axminster service is first rate, but I have found the original factory quality control to be sadly lacking on the last two machines I've bought.
That said, if the motor tends to be too high, maybe the belt is tad too short.
Overall quality otherwise looks OK. Certainly it seems the inverter is an afterthought though - there's easily enough room to mount it under the bed of the lathe (I noticed the electronics for the Jet were slung under the bed). Instead the inverter sticks out of the back in a rather ugly fashion, and you end up with exposed cables to the rpm display. It doesn't cause and functional issue, but looks ungainly.
I believe so. Certainly I couldn't visually see any twisting or misalignment of the belt. The headstock casting means it'd be difficult to get a straightedge in place to do a better check though.selectortone":2u96pwzy said:Are the pulleys in proper alignment with each other?