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Skilsaw No 77 Information

Farmall450

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Dec 23, 2011
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Marengo, Illinois
Has anyone found a thread online with a complete list? I see several stubs beginning on other forums, but nothing near complete. (ie I see the type 16 is '85-'93 vintage). I tried calling Skil, they just confirmed that range, and were no further help.

I just found a mint worm drive type 16 so I guess I'm on the SS No. 77 fan club now. :headscrat :thumbup:

I'd be interested in helping start an info thread.
 
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Mr. Wonderful

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450, I picked up a far from mint type 14 last year and did a refresh. I think the best I could find out on the date was mid 70's. I dont think there is too much info out there. Its a shame. I really like the all metal housing. I just couldn't let this fade into junk. Try Youtube I think I saw at least one video that went over the model years for the No. 77.
 

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Farmall450

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450, I picked up a far from mint type 14 last year and did a refresh. I think the best I could find out on the date was mid 70's. I dont think there is too much info out there. Its a shame. I really like the all metal housing. I just couldn't let this fade into junk. Try Youtube I think I saw at least one video that went over the model years for the No. 77.

Wow you did quite the refresh - looks great!
Yes, I saw one video and a few posts on other forums.
 

Bigblockyeti

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Feb 1, 2018
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Member BreeStephany is likely your best bet on information regarding vintage Skil saws and other vintage Skil products as well. I reached out to Skil awhile ago inquiring specifically about the Blue label tools that were manufactured between the 40's until somewhere in the early 60's if I'm not mistaken. It took forever but my inquiry fell into the hands of someone who sent me a .PDF of a full catalog from a long time ago that really detailed the tools far better than you'd likely get from a manufacturer today.
 
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Farmall450

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Member BreeStephany is likely your best bet on information regarding vintage Skil saws and other vintage Skil products as well. I reached out to Skil awhile ago inquiring specifically about the Blue label tools that were manufactured between the 40's until somewhere in the early 60's if I'm not mistaken. It took forever but my inquiry fell into the hands of someone who sent me a .PDF of a full catalog from a long time ago that really detailed the tools far better than you'd likely get from a manufacturer today.

Thank you!
Care to share a copy? (Pm sent)
 

BreeStephany

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I don't currently have a lot of accurate data to use for dating the manufacturing periods of the post-Blue Label saws, but I was able to obtain the parts manuals from Skil a while back for the Skil 77 Type 1 through Type 17 and figured I would share those in this thread.
<ul>
<li>Skil 77 Type 1 & 2 </li><li>Skil 77 Type 3 - 9</li><li>Skil 77 Type 10 & 11</li><li>Skil 77 Type 12</li><li>Skil 77 Type 13</li><li>Skil 77 Type 14</li><li>Skil 77 Type 15</li><li>Skil 77 Type 16 </li><li>Skil 77 / HD77 Type 17</li>
</ul>
 
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Farmall450

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Courtesy of BigBlockyeti and Robert Bosch Co several years ago, a complete catalog of the earlier Skil lineup, including all the worm drive jigs and fixtures. Interstingly, my 7 1/4" type 16 claims it'll only go through 1 15/16" at 90 degrees, while the one in the catalog is good for 2 3/8".

It also shows their pneumatic tools on the very last few pages.
 
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Farmall450

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I don't currently have a lot of accurate data to use for dating the manufacturing periods of the post-Blue Label saws, but I was able to obtain the parts manuals from Skil a while back for the Skil 77 Type 1 through Type 17 and figured I would share those in this thread.
<ul>
<li>Skil 77 Type 1 & 2 </li><li>Skil 77 Type 3 - 9</li><li>Skil 77 Type 10 & 11</li><li>Skil 77 Type 12</li><li>Skil 77 Type 13</li><li>Skil 77 Type 14</li><li>Skil 77 Type 15</li><li>Skil 77 Type 16 </li><li>Skil 77 / HD77 Type 17</li>
</ul>

Awesome! There isn't a link for the Type 16, unfortunately :(
 

Guido1955

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Jan 18, 2021
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Backyard
Brand newbie here! (I thought I posted this note already, but heavens only knows where it went.) Thanks to Bree for the parts list info. i recently bought a Skilsaw 77 Type 15 worm drive off of craigslist. My first, although I've always wanted one. Original owner, a homeowner type guy, not a contractor, so the saw is in very nice condition. He had the rip guide, wrench, a metal can of Super Lube #264 AND the original metal case. All for $20! After three flushings with kerosene, I actually used the #264 oil instead of buying the new Skil in the tube. Dunno, good/no good? The parts list and Skil customer service informed me that the type 17 brushes would fit my Type 15, so I ordered them from erplacementparts.com. In my fumbling through the internet, I discovered that there are basically no parts readily available for the Type 15. (Maybe eBay or another lucky craigslist find.) I'm also hoping that the switches, although they have different numbers, are compatible. Ereplacement.com has the type 17 switch available. I'd buy it just for insurance. I'd greatly appreciate any insights from the forum.
 
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driftpin

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I have an all-metal 825 (8-1/4") which is at-least 49 years old, probably older, as I bought it used in 1973 in Miami FL. I also have a Model 77 (7-1/4") I bought off a scrap truck last year, via my friend who owns an air compressor sales/service business. The scrap truck stops by his business to sell, last time I was there, the scrap truck guy showed up with a Saylor-Beall 705 on a trailer with a lot of other things piled on both the truck and trailer. The air compressor wasn't 'stuck,' and my friend the business owner pulled it off with his forklift in about 2 minutes, and he got the Model 77 too, and I got it from him. "Let me get it, I'll get it for nearly nothing," and he did. It needed a new switch, about $20 off amazon prime, and it's good to go; I got several tubes of the Skil worm drive oil too, cheap. I think it was 3 tubes for ~$21, shipped.

He refurbishes used compressors, I got a Saylor-Beall 705 from him, almost identical to the one he took-off the scrap truck. Except, mine was refurbished, and had a new Baldor 5 HP motor on it, and a new magnetic switch, along with new Arrow Pneumatic water trap and pressure regulator (2 pc.), for a price that would make guys on here cry.

Skil.01.jpg
Skilsaw 825 worm-drive 8 one-quarter inch saw.jpgSkilsaw.04.jpgSkil worm-drive saw grease 80111.jpg
 

Cglrcng

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Joined
Jul 27, 2022
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450, I picked up a far from mint type 14 last year and did a refresh. I think the best I could find out on the date was mid 70's. I dont think there is too much info out there. Its a shame. I really like the all metal housing. I just couldn't let this fade into junk. Try Youtube I think I saw at least one video that went over the model years for the No. 77.
I have an all metal 88' Edition Model 77 Type-16 7-1/4" Wormdrive Skilsaw, we used it to death in our New home Landscaping business both wood (Fences, decks, framing, Hardscape forming, you name it carpentry wood cutting wise and went through about oh 9-10 Whitecap diamond blades over the years doing brick, concrete and ceramic tile cutting, so it was not only used hard, but put away wet years ago. The business and a good portion of the tools are long ago sold off, but not that saw.
I pulled it out yesterday and the dreaded armature high sparks, and it tripped my ground fault interrupter circuit in the garage repeatedly.

Pulled it all apart as it needs a complete disassemby, rebuild actually just the armature (ordered it on ereplacementparts.com full disassembly deep dive cleaning to get all the caked former work out of it, it has been through the mill, and storage in the case in AZ high heat summers, led to oil leakage seeping.

The armature is backorder, with no eta, but I will wait as I could not find one avail. anywhere. If I could not order, or if they never are off backorder, I will have all the parts and pcs cleaned and ready to list on ebay. (But, would rather have the new replacemeny armature, and get it back in service, they are great workhorses. I also have the manual and the exploded view parts list. (1988 Skilsaw Model 77 - Type 16) AC 120Volt Armature, but originally they also had a 220 Volt Armature avail. (Saw label actually says DC /AC 120/240 Max 60 Hrz).

We never purchased the 220 Volt AC Armature).

If anyone knows a supplier with the 120 AC Armature's in stock now, please share. Thx.

Cglrcng
 

Maui

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Upstate NY
Farmall450, if you ever got a pdf copy of that Skil catalog from Bigblockyeti, I would very much like to get a copy. Can you share it?
 

Bab029

Member
Joined
May 5, 2020
Messages
16
Location
Louisiana
Any ideas on manufacture date for this old Type 11? It was my (great?) grandfather's, and has made it to me. Doubt it is worth anything monetary, but it has a lot of sentimental value. Both prior owners were carpenters by trade and now I'm using it to renovate some rentals. It's a reminder of something my grandfather told me about shortcuts:

You don't judge a carpenter by his mistakes, but how he fixes them.

Lots to unpack there, but perhaps later. Staying on track, it was missing the arbor bolt, so after some study I ordered a 1/4-28 left hand die from china to make one from the shank of a regular grade 8....probably not the best idea, but it works...if anyone has a lead on a replacement, I'd pay for it.

Tried to get the rotating assembly out so I could clean out the lifetime of greasy sawdust, but no luck. It's stuck, or I'm just too chicken to make it come out. I have a habit of fixing things that aren't broken, and don't want this to be another one. I did come by some new brushes, so I settled with replacing those and a dousing of contact cleaner followed by some compressed air.

Got the oil fill plug out and put some fresh schmoo in it, and then promptly rounded off the remaining couple corners on the plug head while tightening it. Guess I need one of those as well. Good news may be, it was boogered up when I got it, so someone was paying attention to the oil through the years. It doesn't leak perceptibly, but it's got a certain patina of grease.

The shoe was a little rusty from too many south Louisiana summers on in a hot shop, so I wet sanded it from 220 to 1000 grit and hit it with a coat of paste wax.

Weighs a ton but cuts like a dream with a new blade compared to my modern regular saw. I'm swooning just a bit. I hope it has a lot of years left in it.
 

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RTM

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SF Bay Area
Lots to unpack there, but perhaps later. Staying on track, it was missing the arbor bolt, so after some study I ordered a 1/4-28 left hand die from china to make one from the shank of a regular grade 8....probably not the best idea, but it works...if anyone has a lead on a replacement, I'd pay for it.
This looks like the LH thread bolt, just don't know the thread size of a modern one. Unfortunately, for this saw, they don't tell the age. For some MKE stuff, they tell you when each serial number ran.



And an oil plug
 

Bab029

Member
Joined
May 5, 2020
Messages
16
Location
Louisiana
This looks like the LH thread bolt, just don't know the thread size of a modern one. Unfortunately, for this saw, they don't tell the age. For some MKE stuff, they tell you when each serial number ran.



And an oil plug
Thanks!
I ordered one of those bolts, it’s bigger, 3/8 or so. I’ll get on one of those oil plugs tho, looks close.
 
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