If I can disassemble, reassemble and calibrate a complete K975 with a 10¡¯ slider with David¡¯s survival guide and help from FOG then anyone should be able to do so with the added video. I have not seen it yet but I am sure it is good.
Off course you get a dialed in machine but just as important is to know where your machine is imperfect. It helps me use my machine smartly and could prevent one from going in circles when something is not working right.
On Jul 27, 2021, at 3:40 AM, David Luckensmeyer <dhluckens@...> wrote:
?Guys and Gals:
If you have not viewed this video then do yourself a favour and do so. I just watched it in full?and recognised many parts from previous videos that David has shared over the years. But in?watching it all together, in 38 mins, for the first time I realised that calibrating the sliding table is?actually doable. I mean, I know David can do it but we all know he is exceedingly capable;?more capable than this Lucky Ducky that¡¯s for sure!
In the course of his video he reviews the key data like:
how to check the cast iron top for flat
ideal height of slider above cast iron
ideal toe-out of slider in relation to the blade
ideal slider tolerance versus Felder¡¯s tolerance versus what¡¯s "good enough¡±
quick and easy ways to reference off the saw blade to set the rip fence toe-out
a quick and highly accurate way to ensure the cross cut fence is square in relation to the?direction of the sliding table.
Plus the key point of the video is to show how to use three inexpensive dial gauges to?undertake the calibration procedure. And Brian Lamb¡¯s tools get a plug, as they should!
At the request of my YouTube viewers, I decided to paste together a (somewhat long) video?on aligning the sliding table on a Felder machine. ?You can view it here:??
David Best https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidpbest/albums https://www.instagram.com/davidpbest/
On Jul 21, 2021, at 8:22 PM,?dsbarnes@...?wrote:
Hi folks - I have just acquired a KF700S saw that needs to be transported about 100 miles,?and was after some guidance on which parts are better off removed, and which left well?alone or braced to prevent damage. I have had a good look through the messages here,?and think I have most of it, but would welcome some additional advice. Direction right now?is to remove the overhead guard, rip fence extension table, outrigger and feeder mount, but?I'm not clear on the best way to deal with the slider. Looking through the parts that came?with the saw when I went up to view it, I'm not seeing any of the wedges that Imran?mentioned in his earlier post, although all of the pallet mtg brackets and other materials?seem to be there. It's a 9ft slider (smaller than the one I wanted, but 9' longer that what I?have now.....) ; I do have a spare set of hands and 2 HF lift tables, so my inclination would?be to remove it to make sure nothing can get damaged; am I storing a whole lot of?downstream pain by going this route? There is limited resource for fabricating anything?once I arrive, and a pretty narrow time window to get everything loaded; I can make (wood)?or 3d print some wedges if that is preferable to removing the slider, but need to have them?ready to go before I leave.? for the actual transportation part, based on the advice of the group I was originally going to?rent a drop deck trailer; ?the only trailer I found locally was $95 / day, and had been ridden?hard and put away wet one too many times for me to want to trust it. As the weather is?going to be variable, plan B is to rent a 17 ft ?Uhaul truck and drag my wheel loader on its?trailer behind it to lift the saw it into the truck - it's a bit of a road train but would get the job?done efficiently. Plan B would be a 2 ton engine lift to get stuff up to the deck height, but it's?likely to be a pretty messy undertaking ?If anyone had any suggestions or better ideas, I?would appreciate some insight from folks who have actually had to live through it Thanks for all of the great conversations to date - I had originally reached out to the group a?couple of years ago when I was looking for Felder shaper and J-P; eventually ended up?with a T130, SAC 20: planer and SCM l'invincible jointer that are waiting for power from a?PP in my basement - I have been absorbing since then, and learned a great deal by?following the decades of experience and knowledge from the group here, as well as?meeting a few of you in person Alpine workshops. Thanks in advance for any assistance you cqan offer ofn the slider - it is greatly?appreciated, and it will be nice to become a Felder owner :) Best regards