Farmer Giles
The biggest tool in the box
I finished cleaning up, painting and repairing the upper guides. I decided to buy new spindles for it from Advanced machinery. Not cheap but this is the business end of the bandsaw.
The odd selection of screws, nuts and bolts were replaced with ones that match and all threads chased with taps and dies.
I then tried out the new lower guide again, it then occurred to me that I needed to try out with the table tilted at 45 degrees.
So the lateral guide rollers need to be almost at the bottom to allow this to happen. This means a very elongated bracket to meet the 16mm mounting hole in the guide unless I move the rear thrust roller to the mounting hole. I tried every permeation of the thrust roller above or below and slept on it before coming up with the best solution. I noticed that there is a hole in the back of the lateral guide holder.
It turns out this was 8.5mm diameter which is the tapping size for an M10 1.5 thread. So I tapped it out, at that point I couldn't return the guide so therefore I had to be sure it would work. The guides come with an aluminium bracket with a 16mm hole and a slot. I used the slot to fix the guide to the bracket with an M10 bolt and the 16mm hole is just a tad larger than 5/8" so can be used to mount the guide in the base. The slot means I have adjustable crank so I can place the guide optimally.
I then mounted the guide, the aluminium bracket fouled the base a little on the bottom right so had to take a small notch out of it. I also sliced off 35mm off the part of the guide that holds the thrust roller. it all fits very nicely.
All the guides are easy to adjust, and although I sliced off the hole that is used for fore/aft adjustment, I have that in the base of the bandsaw so no big deal. And the guides aren't buried in the sawdust chute, they almost mimic the original design with the thrust roller above and to the left.
It looks like the table will tilt 45 degrees, if not the slotted bracket allows me to add a bit more crank and lower the guide a couple more mm if necessary.
So I think I'm just about done with the guides. I'm going to adjust the foot brake next then I should get power sockets fitted net week.
I will paint it at some time, it has had a respray at some time, they covered the angle and blade tensioning indicators but at least it looks like it was sprayed not put on with a butter knife like most machines seem to be. I'll wait until I have used it a bit first before painting. I was too eager with my viceroy lathe and painted it then realised the bearings needed replacing and chipped the paint a few times, best to get the major stuff fettled before painting.
Cheers
Andy
The odd selection of screws, nuts and bolts were replaced with ones that match and all threads chased with taps and dies.
I then tried out the new lower guide again, it then occurred to me that I needed to try out with the table tilted at 45 degrees.
So the lateral guide rollers need to be almost at the bottom to allow this to happen. This means a very elongated bracket to meet the 16mm mounting hole in the guide unless I move the rear thrust roller to the mounting hole. I tried every permeation of the thrust roller above or below and slept on it before coming up with the best solution. I noticed that there is a hole in the back of the lateral guide holder.
It turns out this was 8.5mm diameter which is the tapping size for an M10 1.5 thread. So I tapped it out, at that point I couldn't return the guide so therefore I had to be sure it would work. The guides come with an aluminium bracket with a 16mm hole and a slot. I used the slot to fix the guide to the bracket with an M10 bolt and the 16mm hole is just a tad larger than 5/8" so can be used to mount the guide in the base. The slot means I have adjustable crank so I can place the guide optimally.
I then mounted the guide, the aluminium bracket fouled the base a little on the bottom right so had to take a small notch out of it. I also sliced off 35mm off the part of the guide that holds the thrust roller. it all fits very nicely.
All the guides are easy to adjust, and although I sliced off the hole that is used for fore/aft adjustment, I have that in the base of the bandsaw so no big deal. And the guides aren't buried in the sawdust chute, they almost mimic the original design with the thrust roller above and to the left.
It looks like the table will tilt 45 degrees, if not the slotted bracket allows me to add a bit more crank and lower the guide a couple more mm if necessary.
So I think I'm just about done with the guides. I'm going to adjust the foot brake next then I should get power sockets fitted net week.
I will paint it at some time, it has had a respray at some time, they covered the angle and blade tensioning indicators but at least it looks like it was sprayed not put on with a butter knife like most machines seem to be. I'll wait until I have used it a bit first before painting. I was too eager with my viceroy lathe and painted it then realised the bearings needed replacing and chipped the paint a few times, best to get the major stuff fettled before painting.
Cheers
Andy