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#1
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My father in law has a 1946 dewalt radial arm saw. Anyone have any idea how much it is worth? He is looking to sell it but I am trying to talk him into keeping it.
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#2
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wrote in
: My father in law has a 1946 dewalt radial arm saw. Anyone have any idea how much it is worth? He is looking to sell it but I am trying to talk him into keeping it. What model and what condition is it in? Once properly tuned up, those old DeWalt RASes will hold settings better than anything out there. (It's not a hard process, but does take a few hours.) Puckdropper -- http://www.puckdroppersplace.us/rec.woodworking A mini archive of some of rec.woodworking's best and worst! |
#3
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#4
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#6
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On Thu, 29 Mar 2018 02:35:32 GMT, Puckdropper
wrote: wrote in : On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 18:43:20 -0700 (PDT), wrote: My father in law has a 1946 dewalt radial arm saw. Anyone have any idea how much it is worth? He is looking to sell it but I am trying to talk him into keeping it. Someone might take it off his hands if he's willing to pay them $50. In a heartbeat! Where's he live? We have a dump here, too, but it would take a couple of hours. I would need more than $50. (I have a '75ish Crapsman that I don't believe has been so much as plugged in for 25 years). Maybe some day I'll have a use for it. |
#7
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#8
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Model GP and is in great working condition. Little dusty is all.
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#9
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I am not paying someone to come throw it away. I can do that for free. If you are interested in buying it make an offer.
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#10
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wrote in news:66980948-fe05-4b13-834e-57663235fe56
@googlegroups.com: Model GP and is in great working condition. Little dusty is all. This guy? http://vintagemachinery.org/photoind....aspx?id=27418 Some dude on eBay's asking $290 buy it now for his saw DeWalt GP. That's not what it's WORTH, that's what he's ASKING. Puckdropper -- http://www.puckdroppersplace.us/rec.woodworking A mini archive of some of rec.woodworking's best and worst! |
#11
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#12
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10 inch dual pivot arm. It is in Junction City KS
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#13
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That's the one
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#14
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#16
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#17
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wrote in
: On Thu, 29 Mar 2018 11:02:57 -0700 (PDT), wrote: I am not paying someone to come throw it away. I can do that for free. If you are interested in buying it make an offer. Um, that's the point. I doubt you're going to find anyone who will give you anything for it. Radial arm saws are really passe. The RAS has its place in some people's shops, especially a DeWalt RAS properly tuned. I use my RAS more than my SCMS, it holds 90 degrees while my SCMS arm deflects really easily. Should I get a better SCMS? Maybe--but my RAS is better at solving the same problems. If you've got room for a permanent cross-cut setup, a /good/ RAS can be a very good way to go. The RAS can do everything a SCMS can do plus run a dado stack. If you're constantly moving the saw, the CMS is probably going to be a better saw for you. They're light weight and good ones will hold their settings in a variety of conditions. Puckdropper -- http://www.puckdroppersplace.us/rec.woodworking A mini archive of some of rec.woodworking's best and worst! |
#18
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On Fri, 30 Mar 2018 04:12:18 GMT, Puckdropper
wrote: wrote in : On Thu, 29 Mar 2018 11:02:57 -0700 (PDT), wrote: I am not paying someone to come throw it away. I can do that for free. If you are interested in buying it make an offer. Um, that's the point. I doubt you're going to find anyone who will give you anything for it. Radial arm saws are really passe. The RAS has its place in some people's shops, especially a DeWalt RAS properly tuned. I use my RAS more than my SCMS, it holds 90 degrees while my SCMS arm deflects really easily. Should I get a better SCMS? Maybe--but my RAS is better at solving the same problems. Let me put it another way. If you didn't have a RAS, would you buy one? I sure as hell wouldn't. If you've got room for a permanent cross-cut setup, a /good/ RAS can be a very good way to go. The RAS can do everything a SCMS can do plus run a dado stack. As much as I'd use the setup, it wouldn't be worth the time setting it up. A router and a table saw will do everything, too. If you're constantly moving the saw, the CMS is probably going to be a better saw for you. They're light weight and good ones will hold their settings in a variety of conditions. The only thing I want the SCMS for is crosscuts. No dados needed. I have the room for the RAS but, as I've mentioned here, it hasn't been plugged so much as plugged in, in over 25 years. |
#19
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On Wed, 28 Mar 2018 18:43:20 -0700 (PDT)
wrote: My father in law has a 1946 dewalt radial arm saw. Anyone have any idea how much it is worth? He is looking to sell it but I am trying to talk him into keeping it. talk is cheap make him an offer or send it to the teardown guy on youtube i think his name os boltr so we can see the innards |
#20
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On 3/30/2018 9:51 PM, wrote:
On Fri, 30 Mar 2018 04:12:18 GMT, Puckdropper wrote: wrote in : On Thu, 29 Mar 2018 11:02:57 -0700 (PDT), wrote: I am not paying someone to come throw it away. I can do that for free. If you are interested in buying it make an offer. Um, that's the point. I doubt you're going to find anyone who will give you anything for it. Radial arm saws are really passe. The RAS has its place in some people's shops, especially a DeWalt RAS properly tuned. I use my RAS more than my SCMS, it holds 90 degrees while my SCMS arm deflects really easily. Should I get a better SCMS? Maybe--but my RAS is better at solving the same problems. Let me put it another way. If you didn't have a RAS, would you buy one? I sure as hell wouldn't. I started with a 10" RAS many years ago. I added a 1hp Craftsman cast iron top TS about 4 years later. I seldom used the RAS after that and got rid of it about 4 years after that. I never missed it. In the 90's I set up a dedicated CMS station and almost as soon as I got my first cabinet saw, 1999ish, the CMS station was removed and the CMS went into storage. I could/can cross cut as accurately with my 2 cabinet saws as with the RAS or the CMS. Why did I get another SCMS? I always find myself needing to square the end of a board and or cut one to length when the TS is set up to cut dado's or rabbets. The Kapex is great but certainly was not a necessity for me. It is more of a time and effort saver for me. And it's list of advantages over the other brands really checked all of the boxes that were keeping me from buying another brand previously. If you've got room for a permanent cross-cut setup, a /good/ RAS can be a very good way to go. The RAS can do everything a SCMS can do plus run a dado stack. As much as I'd use the setup, it wouldn't be worth the time setting it up. A router and a table saw will do everything, too. If you're constantly moving the saw, the CMS is probably going to be a better saw for you. They're light weight and good ones will hold their settings in a variety of conditions. The only thing I want the SCMS for is crosscuts. No dados needed. I have the room for the RAS but, as I've mentioned here, it hasn't been plugged so much as plugged in, in over 25 years. |
#21
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On 3/31/2018 1:14 PM, Leon wrote:
.... I started with a 10" RAS many years ago.Â* I added a 1hp Craftsman cast iron top TS about 4 years later.Â* I seldom used the RAS after that and got rid of it about 4 years after that.Â* I never missed it. In theÂ* 90's I set up a dedicated CMS station and almost as soon as I got my first cabinet saw, 1999ish, the CMS station was removed and the CMS went into storage. I could/can cross cut as accurately with my 2 cabinet saws as with the RAS or the CMS. Why did I get another SCMS?Â* I always find myself needing to square the end of a board and or cut one to length when the TS is set up to cut dado's or rabbets.Â* The Kapex is great but certainly was not a necessity for me.Â* It is more of a time and effort saver for me.Â* And it's list of advantages over the other brands really checked all of the boxes that were keeping me from buying another brand previously. .... Similar here; 10" DeWalt RAS was only thing had initially; did absolutely everything with it...that would have been early '70s. Didn't get the Model 66 until mid80's I'd guess altho can't recollect for absolute certain any longer precisely. Picked it up directly from Powermatic in McMinnville, TN. Kept the RAS as well; before the day of the miter saw..."inherited" a 14" Rockwell/Delta from owner of a cabinet shop I got to know well when he retired but it was large-enough didn't move it when came back to farm as Dad had bought the identical DeWalt when he was redoing the house and so it was already hear and I thought I'd be satisfied...kick my self routinely when have larger timbers than the 10" will handle... ![]() -- |
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