tinbender 66
Well-known member
Wow! Heckuva list!! I thought mine was long. Looking forward to the warmer weather again so you can pick up a head of steam
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Sorry it took me so long to post pics of my new alien. I am very busy these days. I got engaged on Thursday.![]()
And that planer is Awesome. So much potential to restore and to use. It basically doubles the width that can be planed. Sweet.I will try to. I have already disassembled it and I must say, it is straightforward as to the main construction. It is also very stout in construction. My plan is to strip it tonight and start painting it tomorrow. I've settled on gray for all tools moving forward. It might be a little dull next to my drill press and my RAS, time will tell if I change my mind.Keep us informed on the little planer smschriefer. Hopefuly mine will be in my hands by this weekend.
Your photo said "sell planer" but I did mean jointer.
RL, I thought it was the planer that was for sale also, if not, talk to your tech's in the graphics department who threw your photo together. Just sayin.
Sorry it took me so long to post pics of my new alien. I am very busy these days. I got engaged on Thursday. Had to meet friends I didn't even know she had all weekend, but I am not complaining. As a result, garage related, I will move from a 13x24 one car to a 20x20 two car garage. This after I finished putting down ceramic tile and getting things in order at this place.
On to the planer. She is in great shape, but at some point it was repainted a color close to original. I am going to strip her down and start with bare arn... as I always do. I included a shot of the planer with half the table cleaned. I use Boeshield products and the finished side took 5 minutes total to spay the product on, scrub a little with a wire brush, let it sit for 90 seconds, wipe it off and then spray on the protectorant. Great products, I might say. So here she is, as of today, prior to tear down. Oh, the bench it sits on is an original Companion model from the late 30's and based on the motor date, this planer is circa 1939.![]()
Wow! Heckuva list!! I thought mine was long. Looking forward to the warmer weather again so you can pick up a head of steam.
Your collection is amazing - no only are you finding great old stuff in good shape - for what looks like very good prices - but you are doing a great job of finding the rare stuff as well. Keep it up!
RL I think you are being very smart about not trying to be too strict on the "Cman" badge . . .you'd miss a lot of great opportunities and very cool machines like your jonter. Besides, it is (ultimately) a shop, not a museum - you want to be able to enjoy and use your machines - that's what they were intended for. Keep grabbing the ones that speak to you.


The only time a RAS is dangerous is when someone tries to pull the blade back towards themself when making a cut. This is taught to many first time RAS users and is backwards... you push the saw into the work.
I'm not sure I'm following you...here's a picture from a Craftsman instruction manual; the saw is pulled into the work, not pushed.
One point in favour of the RAS that nobody seems to have mentioned is that you can't rip panels with a CMS.
I would have thought that was the biggest difference.
Cheers
Jim
Perhaps there's some technique I'm missing, but I will never try to rip cut with this saw again. That's what a table saw is for.
Dave,...As soon as they arrive I'll try them out on my Swag Off-Road table -- it has a little surface rust.
The 6"x1" Red Leader is using is designated 9S. The 2" 3M Roloc wheel I just tested is designated 2S and appears slightly coarser than the 9S but produces the same scratch pattern as the HF Fine. You might notice in my second picture that the 3M wheel is significantly thicker so it should last quite a bit longer than the HF ones. I'll continue to use the HF wheels because the aluminum polishing I do tends to clog the wheel long before it wears it out. I also finish with a buffing wheel and compound(s).Bob, interesting results. Do you know what version of the EXL wheel you were using? I believe it comes in course, medium, and fine. I still haven't bought an EXL wheel and I'm curious as to which you used. I can buy a whole bunch of the HF pads for that price and then finish with a buffing wheel and compound.

98TJ,
Beautiful saw! That top is looking great! Did it come with the fence? Any other accessories? If you get the chance you should register over at the OWWM forum and post the saw to the registry. The good news about these old Craftsman saws is that since they made many of them, parts are easy to come by and cheap (or free!).
I'm going to try to do a little painting in the garage tonight. I got home late so I didn't want to disturb the neighbors with any sawing. Tomorrow's a late night too so I'm aiming for Friday as a nice night for some trim work.
I have about 5 weeks before the baby comes so 5 weeks is my goal to finish most of everything! (minus the corrugated steel ceiling and epoxy floor).
My next big challenge once I am done with trim is going to be the workbench and the cabinets. I'm going to try out some art deco accents on both but it may take a while. Between now and then I also need to find a jig/sabre saw![]()
OK
Hi my name is Mick
I'm new here.
I own one of these saws...
I picked it up from a buddy who was trashing all of his dads old shop stuff.
I got it and tucked it away for later.
I saw your picture and the mention of OWWM, so I went and double checked, The saw is in good condition.
I think I just caught OWWM disease. See what these fourms so to ya.
Nice shop build.
Now back to the regularly scheduled programming.
Mick
