SweetD
Well-known member
Not sure if anyone is interested in this, but I have been looking for a vintage scroll saw for awhile (or at least thinking about looking for one), and I finally pulled the trigger.
This is a Sears-Roebuck Dunlap Model # 103.0407 from the 1940s, made by King Seeley Mfg. It's an 18" throat depth -
I purchased it here in RI from an older gentleman who told me that it was his father's saw originally. His father had passed about 5 years ago, and he is downsizing some of his stuff.
The cool thing is that the saw works perfectly, and has a great vintage Westinghouse electric motor, and a custom made table (by his father, signed underneath the table 1986).
I think I will simply clean it and lube it. The paint is original save for where someone painted the arm a sloppy red at some point.
Anyone else sporting a cool old scroll saw?
Dave
This is a Sears-Roebuck Dunlap Model # 103.0407 from the 1940s, made by King Seeley Mfg. It's an 18" throat depth -
I purchased it here in RI from an older gentleman who told me that it was his father's saw originally. His father had passed about 5 years ago, and he is downsizing some of his stuff.
The cool thing is that the saw works perfectly, and has a great vintage Westinghouse electric motor, and a custom made table (by his father, signed underneath the table 1986).
I think I will simply clean it and lube it. The paint is original save for where someone painted the arm a sloppy red at some point.
Anyone else sporting a cool old scroll saw?
Dave
). This allows them to turn very tight corners no older machine could match. The new blades also break quite often so the blade holders are designed to be easier to change. The quick blade release also makes inside cuts (where you have to unhook one end of the blade, place the blade through a drilled hole in the workpiece and re-attach) easier to perform. Foot controls, variable speed are also options not easily available on older machines.