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Re: Finding a used saw?
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýHi Thomas:
You are welcome here. And you seem the opposite of naive. I¡¯d love for you to stay in the forum ¡ª you are in a very interesting area of manufacturing. Not many colleagues of mine are in the boat servicing industry and your mentions of
metal working sound fun too.?
There are always passionate people on forums. Some are best avoided. I¡¯ll often write a texts to friends who participate here, as a way of venting offline about the ¡°pricks¡±. Said pricks likely do the same about me!
All said, I¡¯d love to see pictures of your shop and learn more about your work. And you mention a saw injury. Are you ok? Is there anything to be learned from it? That we all can learn?
Anyway, I hope you decide to stay.?
Warm regards,
Lucky
Dr David Luckensmeyer
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of Trboat <trboatworks@...>
Sent: Tuesday, May 16, 2023 6:15:57 AM To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [FOG] Finding a used saw? ?
[Edited Message Follows] Oh- I¡¯m ThomasMy shop started out with doing shipwrights/yacht carpentry I have gradually expanded into multiple capacities including stainless steel and aluminum fabrication, tig welding, machining etc. I came to setup the shop after a long stint of carpentry and cabinet building for homes and commercial businesses. This injury on the table saw last week has me once again bringing in new equipment and reconfiguring the shop to accommodate it. My shop is modest in size but capable. This Felder gear I am bringing in will make it more so. So hello all. |
Re: Finding a used saw?
Your opinion matters David, thank you for sharing it. On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 3:34 PM David Sabo via <sabo_dave=[email protected]> wrote:
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Re: N4400 bandsaw issues- follow up
Hi Murray, one of the oddest issues I ran into was an N4400 with vibration issues that appeared to defy logic.
It turned out that one of the bolts on the frame hub that captures the wheel spindle wasn't tight. The bolt appeared tight because the locknut had it clamped in place, however the bolt wasn't actually pressing against the spindle. Regards, Rod. |
Re: Finding a used saw?
David Sabo
But did you know that it only takes a minute to rotate a segment ?? That's ifin it ain't stuck to cutterhead. Did you also know that lots of places use segmented heads ? Did you know that the USA's #1 Tersa advocate acknowledges that a segment head might be best? .....or mighten not. Betcha didn't know that cost isn't important to everyone.? .....................right ![]() Lookin more like the briar patch instead of the weeds. D
On Monday, May 15, 2023 at 02:21:57 PM EDT, David P. Best <dbestworkshop@...> wrote:
I like going into the weeds, so let me also add an additional factor to consider. ?For a number of years, the knives for the Tersa head were patient protected and thus available from few suppliers (like one) and the pricing reflected that fact. ?The Tersa patient has expired, availability is now close to commodity status (available on Amazon even), the inflation-adjusted prices have come down a bit, and newer versions of the knives have emerged with different steel alloys. ? In contrast, the carbide insert on the Felder SilentPower head is proprietary to Felder, only available from them, and about a month ago someone on here was trying to find replacements and being told they are out of stock in both USA and Austria with an expected 4-6 week lead time. ?Personally, I try to avoid sole-sourced consumable dependency. ? David Best DBestWorkshop@... https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidpbest/collections/ https://www.youtube.com/@David_Best
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Re: Standby power usage
#electrical
Hi Simon, 20 to 30 watts would be suitable estimate for the CF-741 depending upon options fitted...........Regards, Rod.
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Re: Finding a used saw?
David Sabo
Calm down fella - I haven't called anyone names.? Questioning your decisions is not name calling.? Perhaps you should heed your own advice and listen to other's viewpoints too. Assuming a consumable will decrease overhead when it might very well increase it would also be a mistake.? My position has always been that purchase cost is not the sole thing to figure out true and total overhead cost.? It was also that Andy's computation of blade cost was flawed.? I've acknowledged that how you run your operation only needs to satisfy you (as long as you're the only -or- majority shareholder)?? And it's absolutely fine that you want to value tool capability, process speed, and duty cycle as most important.? All I'm saying is that if you don't fully (and accurately) measure, calculate, and account? (charge) for all that attendant labor - you are leaving money on the table.? And ignoring or miscalculating it as Andy seemingly is, doesn't make it magically disappear from the accounting ledger. ? With regard to your first variable - aren't there lots of machines, tooling and processes that would be capable of executing the work you're asked to do ?? I think we all know the answer is yes, so you must use some other yardstick by which to select a particular one, yes ?? I'll bet the decision comes down to its effect on overhead. Or are you gonna tell us it's process speed ? ? ? ? counts against overhead Or, attendant labor for changeout ?????? counts against overhead. Maybe it's just plain ol' purchase price..........counts against your overheadD
On Monday, May 15, 2023 at 02:21:30 PM EDT, Trboat <trboatworks@...> wrote:
I¡¯d suggest you take a break from posting on forums until such time as you can listen to the experience of others without name calling. In my business cost is always the least important variable. It is a distant third for my clientele being upstaged by the quality of the work and the timeframes in which the work is executed. In my shop of primary importance is that the machine, process or tooling is capable of executing the work. Second to basic functionality is process speed. Third is duty cycle and the attendant labor which changeout impose on production. All of these are costs to the basic premise of a professional shop which is to execute the contract to the specified standards in the agreed time frame. Tooling is a low cost consumable which has the risk of not selected appropriately to have a high carryover burden to process success. It is a mistake to assume a consumable item at twice the purchase cost is an increase in overhead when it very well may decrease it. Thank you for you thoughts but you are mistaken: ¡°¡±In a pro shop cost is the least important variable for tooling like this." ?
?
If this is your position - then you aren't running a business.?? Cost of frequently replaced item (overhead) is absolutely a top variable, along with labor and material cost.? It seems it's that labor cost (and how it's allocated within overhead & into the overall cost of one knife system vs.. another) that we're really disagreeing about.
?
While the initial price of a head or blades (and its tiny % of your overhead) may seem trivial - how one's choice of such absolutely impacts the business's bottom line.? Same as that cheap truck that slowly bleeds you maintenance, increased fuel costs and downtime vs. the new one that gets better gas mileage and is always ready to go.? Or any of the myriad of other capital expenditures you've made to increase your production (efficiency). ??
?
?
Why did you upgrade or buy any of your equipment ?? Because it looked good in your shop ?? No , because its cost was offset by the money it makes you.? Or doesn't.
?
?
Perhaps the gain or loss of one choice vs.another is acceptable to you , it's your choice after all. But to say that tooling cost is the least important line item is a bit naive in my view.¡±¡± -?David Sabo |
Re: Update on Martin T32 Jointer/Planer
When I started doing my research the Panhans was really one of the standouts.? I liked it better than the Hofmann.
Problem was they had no warranty or support in the US that I could find. The Panhans is really a nice piece!? The FS 7 has 2300mm tables vs 2550mm on the Panhans but no cut outs on the FS 7. The touch controls seem amazin on the Panhans! PK |
Re: Finding a used saw?
I didnt think the discussion was getting too spicy.? Im the?aforementioned well-heeled garage warrior. Although, I technically work out of my garage and my basement. I have tersa running m42 knives in my 500mm jointer, and i have a byrd in my 20" powermatic import planer. The surface finish off the byrd leaves A LOT to be desired. However, those carbide edges go and go and go and go. I swapped them after the first year of running maybe 4-5,000 bdft of 8/4 through the machine thinking, "these have to be dull by now and i am simply not noticing it". There was no distinction in cut quality after the rotation, none. The second time i rotated the inserts was 3-4 years later. I noticed a slight improvement in surface finish from that rotation. It was said before, but rotating the inserts is a complete PITA. The marketing will have you believe it's?as easy as 1,2, 3... but it's a multiple hour job. I think i timed myself the second time and it was almost two hours to mark, remove, clean, reinsert, and torque all 100+/- cutters. Now, keep in mind that is one marathon session required every 3-4 years of modest hobbyist usage. My jointer requires a 5-7 minute tersa knife swap roughly twice a year.? Personally, i dont?care too much about the time required for a swap or the cost of the knives/cutterhead. I want the best surface finish. Between my two machines, the jointer produces the vastly superior planed surface. The byrd would be acceptable to me if i planned on running a ton of rough lumber through it and i had a means of quickly kissing it with a widebelt?afterwards. The chip compaction in my cyclone bin is very nice off the byrd. The tersa fills the bin with half as much sawdust because the shavings are long and fluffy.? I am very interested in seeing the high end hermance, martin, felder helical cutterheads in person.? Patrick On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 2:21?PM David P. Best <dbestworkshop@...> wrote:
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Re: Finding a used saw?
It would be about 4500$ retail for mine.? On Mon, May 15, 2023 at 1:23 PM David Davies <myfinishingtouch@...> wrote:
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Re: Finding a used saw?
¿ªÔÆÌåÓýI like going into the weeds, so let me also add an additional factor to consider. ?For a number of years, the knives for the Tersa head were patient protected and thus available from few suppliers (like one) and the pricing reflected that fact. ?The Tersa patient has expired, availability is now close to commodity status (available on Amazon even), the inflation-adjusted prices have come down a bit, and newer versions of the knives have emerged with different steel alloys. ?In contrast, the carbide insert on the Felder SilentPower head is proprietary to Felder, only available from them, and about a month ago someone on here was trying to find replacements and being told they are out of stock in both USA and Austria with an expected 4-6 week lead time. ?Personally, I try to avoid sole-sourced consumable dependency. ? David Best DBestWorkshop@... https://www.flickr.com/photos/davidpbest/collections/ https://www.youtube.com/@David_Best
|
Re: Finding a used saw?
I¡¯d suggest you take a break from posting on forums until such time as you can listen to the experience of others without name calling.
In my business cost is always the least important variable. It is a distant third for my clientele being upstaged by the quality of the work and the timeframes in which the work is executed. In my shop of primary importance is that the machine, process or tooling is capable of executing the work. Second to basic functionality is process speed. Third is duty cycle and the attendant labor which changeout impose on production. All of these are costs to the basic premise of a professional shop which is to execute the contract to the specified standards in the agreed time frame. Tooling is a low cost consumable which has the risk of not selected appropriately to have a high carryover burden to process success. It is a mistake to assume a consumable item at twice the purchase cost is an increase in overhead when it very well may decrease it. Thank you for you thoughts but you are mistaken: ¡°¡±In a pro shop cost is the least important variable for tooling like this." ?
?
If this is your position - then you aren't running a business.?? Cost of frequently replaced item (overhead) is absolutely a top variable, along with labor and material cost.? It seems it's that labor cost (and how it's allocated within overhead & into the overall cost of one knife system vs.. another) that we're really disagreeing about.
?
While the initial price of a head or blades (and its tiny % of your overhead) may seem trivial - how one's choice of such absolutely impacts the business's bottom line.? Same as that cheap truck that slowly bleeds you maintenance, increased fuel costs and downtime vs. the new one that gets better gas mileage and is always ready to go.? Or any of the myriad of other capital expenditures you've made to increase your production (efficiency). ??
?
?
Why did you upgrade or buy any of your equipment ?? Because it looked good in your shop ?? No , because its cost was offset by the money it makes you.? Or doesn't.
?
?
Perhaps the gain or loss of one choice vs.another is acceptable to you , it's your choice after all. But to say that tooling cost is the least important line item is a bit naive in my view.¡±¡± -?David Sabo |
Re: Finding a used saw?
¿ªÔÆÌåÓý
The design of the machine itself is also a factor in the comparison.? My experience is that insert heads are well suited to the hammer type and other machines that run smaller diameter heads and lack chipbreakers or pressure bars and good hold down rollers.?
Tersa are wonderful with 5" diameter heads on a heavy stout machine.? I'd want Tersa on a Format, Martin, L'Invincible or Panhans type machine but not on a lower end one.? Others will have to speak of the 700 build as I'm not familiar enough with the design
to guess on a choice.? Dave
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on behalf of David Sabo via groups.io <sabo_dave@...>
Sent: Monday, May 15, 2023 1:59 PM To: [email protected] <[email protected]> Subject: Re: [FOG] Finding a used saw? ?
Now we're really gonna get into the weeds.? a Tersa head isn't free either.? And might even be the most expensive purchase option initially.? Depends on where it's sourced.? SCMi is prob. cheaper than Felder, and both likely
cheaper than sourcing one on your own.
Right now, a SilentPower head on a 16" Hammer combo J/P is less than $200 over their self aligning blade system.? And you can have it delivered today.? Don't know what the Tersa option adds or subtracts or how long the wait
would be for it to be made.? I think it's safe to say a Tersa will be more money in this scenario.
A 12" head directly from Tersa is roughly $2750 these days.
But if we're talking about a F4 Dual 51...........................I have no idea what the SP option runs on that.? I think it safe to say it's not going to be $200.
D
On Monday, May 15, 2023 at 01:23:01 PM EDT, David Davies <myfinishingtouch@...> wrote:
What nobody has factored into the cost equation is how many tersa blades you can purchase for the option cost on the insert cutterhead.? Isn't it a couple thousand dollar option?
Dave Davies
?
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martin/campshure/co/llc
mac campshure
7412 elmwood ave.
middleton, wi 53562-3106
608-332-2330?cell
Designing and building for 50 years