Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have reached an age where I am able to spend my winters in Florida and
have been trying to set up a small shop in my garage, leaving my machinery in my main shop up north. I was tempted by a cheap Harbor Freight 6-inch joiner at the irrestible price of $189. I am old enough to know better so I really have no one to blame but myself for ever buying this piece of junk. First of all it took two full days to assemble it due to the instructions which had to have been written by a non-English speaking person who no idea at all of what he/she was doing. I also bought a Rigid table saw for $569. At least it had clear instructions and was easy to assemble. Its fence has a visible bow in it--so far out I didn't even bother trying to just how far it was out. I can correct that by fastening a baltic birch plywood fence to it. I suspect that table is out and am waiting for a machinist straight edge to see just how far out. Their cust. service says that if the table is more than 12 thousandths out they will send me a new table but they didn't say how far out the new table might be. The one positive thing I an say for it is that is is fairly vibration free for a saw with a motor hanging out the back. (Cabinet saws usually have multiple belts which are short because the motor is below and very close to the arbor and this really reduces vibration. I dont feel quite as stupid with the purchase of the table saw as the joiner but I wish I had just gone for quality instead of price. I'd sure like to hear from any one who has succeeded in really tuning up one of these HF cheap joiners and would like to know how they were able to set their blades without jack screws or springs to raise the blade. I suppose it is possible that I just got a defective unit where they forgot to install the jack screws or springs in the cutter head. Joe |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "no spam" wrote in message ... Snip The one positive thing I an say for it is that is is fairly vibration free for a saw with a motor hanging out the back. (Cabinet saws usually have multiple belts which are short because the motor is below and very close to the arbor and this really reduces vibration. I think that the 3 short belts would be more likely to ADD vibration as they spin at a faster speed than the single long one on a contractors saw. The cabinet saws typically have much more mass that helps cut down on vibration. |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Joe wrote:I'd sure like to hear from any one who has succeeded in really
tuning up one of these HF cheap joiners and would like to know how they were able to set their blades without jack screws or springs to raise the blade. I suppose it is possible that I just got a defective unit where they forgot to install the jack screws or springs in the cutter head. Joe You could make a set of magnetic gauges (if the table is iron), which will hold the knife in place while you tighten the gibs. Tom Work at your leisure! |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
no spam wrote:
I have reached an age where I am able to spend my winters in Florida and have been trying to set up a small shop in my garage, leaving my machinery in my main shop up north. I was tempted by a cheap Harbor Freight 6-inch joiner at the irrestible price of $189. I am old enough to know better so I really have no one to blame but myself for ever buying this piece of junk. First of all it took two full days to assemble it due to the instructions which had to have been written by a non-English speaking person who no idea at all of what he/she was doing. I also bought a Rigid table saw for $569. At least it had clear instructions and was easy to assemble. Its fence has a visible bow in it--so far out I didn't even bother trying to just how far it was out. I can correct that by fastening a baltic birch plywood fence to it. I suspect that table is out and am waiting for a machinist straight edge to see just how far out. Their cust. service says that if the table is more than 12 thousandths out they will send me a new table but they didn't say how far out the new table might be. The one positive thing I an say for it is that is is fairly vibration free for a saw with a motor hanging out the back. (Cabinet saws usually have multiple belts which are short because the motor is below and very close to the arbor and this really reduces vibration. I dont feel quite as stupid with the purchase of the table saw as the joiner but I wish I had just gone for quality instead of price. I'd sure like to hear from any one who has succeeded in really tuning up one of these HF cheap joiners and would like to know how they were able to set their blades without jack screws or springs to raise the blade. I suppose it is possible that I just got a defective unit where they forgot to install the jack screws or springs in the cutter head. Joe I just looked at one of those jointers for $189. It has screws in the bottom of the groove to raise the jointer knife. A hell of an improvement over the 4" Craftsman that my FIL gave me. The little Craftsman (about 50 years old) also has a terrible adjustment bolt mechanism for leveling the tables. I spent a useless hour trying to adjust it until I took it completely apart and saw what a mess the adjuster were (loosening or tightening the lock bold easily changes the table by height by several thousands. In all I probably spent about 3 hours trying to get the tables level with each other and the knives at the same height as the outfeed table. The tables are not flat and I have never had a jointer before. You adjust the knives by putting a little tension on the holding screw and then you tap the knife down with a piece of hard wood or move it up by tapping the bottom of the overhanging knife. I though the HF$189 jointer would be a huge improvement as both tables moved smoothly with hand wheels and the tables looked flat, but I didn't measure with a straight edge. If you have a visible bow in your TS fence, you need to get Rigid to replace the fence. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Electric shocks from computer case | UK diy | |||
Cheap way of reducing dust in loft | UK diy | |||
Cheap drills | UK diy | |||
HD foam for laptop case? | UK diy | |||
Cheap battery operated smoke alarms... grrrr.... | UK diy |