Re: Felder K975 arbor bearing
David, This is the 1 1/4" spindle on 2017 KF700. I have no clue how to lubricate this bearing. [image: IMG_0693.JPG] [image: IMG_0694.JPG] James
By
James Zhu
·
#108063
·
|
Re: End profiling on shaper
David seems to be getting a lot of use out of his fancy Aigner fence fingers. Mark
By
Mark Koury <mhkoury@...>
·
#108062
·
|
Re: End profiling on shaper
Very nice video. Nice to see tooling of the common-man in use instead of Zuani once in a while. I chuckled to myself when he said ¡°And now, like so much in woodworking, it¡¯s just the monotony of
By
David P. Best
·
#108061
·
|
Re: Felder FB-510 Blade Tracking
When I got my FB600 it was terribly out of adjustment and I found I had to adjust the lower wheel tilt to get everything to work properly. I know from experience you can't follow all the adjustments
By
"[email protected]
·
#108060
·
|
Re: Shop LED Lights
Mark as far as the lumen rating goes I was just using the manufacturers specs for comparison, Phillips for the T8's I use and Hyperikon for the lights Jason used. When I tested the actual output, the
By
"[email protected]
·
#108059
·
|
Re: End profiling on shaper
Watching that video, I notice very little dust on the cast iron table as opposed to my Kappa 400. Is that the Martin, or his dust collection? Bill Belanger [email protected]> wrote:
By
Bill Belanger
·
#108058
·
|
Re: Shop LED Lights
I will report back tomorrow when I can look at my paperwork on this. Jason Holtz J. Holtz Furniture 3307 Snelling Ave. South Minneapolis, MN 55406 612.432.2765
By
Jason Holtz
·
#108057
·
|
Re: Felder FB-510 Blade Tracking
I'd check your wheels for coplanarity first. Not the easiest thing to do either. I found a narrower blade can handle a misalignment better than a wide one. Jason Holtz J. Holtz Furniture 3307 Snelling
By
Jason Holtz
·
#108056
·
|
Re: End profiling on shaper
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zaN3y0m8D1w It appears that David at Curl and Burl is highly motivated to produce a series of videos. ?In addition to the videos by David Best and Steve (Extreme
By
joelgelman
·
#108055
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidpbest/23737552309/in/album-72157711930240666/ <https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidpbest/23737552309/in/album-72157711930240666/>
By
habacomike (Mike King)
·
#108054
·
|
Re: Shop LED Lights
Two things. You are missing the effect of reduced heat which may translate into reduced air conditioning load and increased heating load. Second and much more picayune, that should be wh per day¡
By
habacomike (Mike King)
·
#108053
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
I flipped the dial. ?There is quite a bit of space between the dial and the flat surface. ?In looking at the Oneway, that has flat surfaces at the top and bottom where the flat surface clears the
By
joelgelman
·
#108052
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
You can¡¯t have too much or the back of the blade will drag on it¡¯s way thru the cut. Brian Lamb blamb11@... www.lambtoolworks.com
By
Brian Lamb
·
#108051
·
|
Re: Shop LED Lights
John, Your model assumes greater efficiency gain than mine, thus requires fewer bulbs needed to achieve the same savings. You're replacing 32W with 18W, a 45% efficiency gain.? A modern 32W T8
By
mark thomas
·
#108050
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
some years ago, I was concerned?? with the geometry of the cut with toe out.? So I worked it out using? CAD.? The deviation from flat into the slightly? concave geometry with? quite a few
By
Cliff Rohrabacher, Esq. <rohrabacher@...>
·
#108049
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
Flip the indicator over in the Lamb Tool Works Holder and you can use it against the fence to indicate the blade. You might need a bit of a spacer to clear the dial of the indicator, but it works
By
Brian Lamb
·
#108048
·
|
Re: Shop LED Lights
This is how I approached it Mark. This based on the T8's I use in my shop and the LED bulbs Jason said he used.?T8 fluorescent 32 W rated at 2450 lumens?T8 LED 18 W rated at 2100 lumens14 W
By
"[email protected]
·
#108047
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
Thanks. I just mentioned that some use wood. ?I saw a recent thread on a similar topic, but that focused on the use of shims (with excellent detail by David Best). ?As for the options of using a
By
joelgelman
·
#108046
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
And another comment, your method of cutting a piece of wood on the slider and then touching it to the rip fence is going to include the toe out of the slider and the toe out of the rip fence, and
By
Brian Lamb
·
#108045
·
|
Re: Rip Fence toe out calibration
Always done it with an indicator. Brian Lamb blamb11@... www.lambtoolworks.com
By
Brian Lamb
·
#108044
·
|