Well, you folks have all been pretty busy since I last stopped by.
I guess I've been kinda busy myself, but nothing woodworking/shop related sadly.
Between a tooth infection and my truck breaking down, work, and the basic everyday home stuff, just haven't had any time.
I will say if you happen to own a Ford 4.9 straight 6, be careful if you try to replace the distributor. Mine just sheared the pump gear roll pin, but I thought I'd go ahead and get a new distributor while they are still available.'
However all the new ones you can actually get seem to have a steel gear instead of the correct cast iron gear. Glad I caught that, otherwise it would chew up the gear cast into the cam in a few months.
So after chasing that around for a week I just put a new roll pin in my old one.
Jimreed, hickory is some hard stuff. Once in a great while at the cabinet shop we would do a house in it.
Mostly we used oak, and with that the blades in the majority of the tools would last a week and a half or so - generally we did a good sized house's cabinets in a day. Kitchen, master and guest bath, and a large entertainment center was the most common run.
We used plywood for the finished sides, but made our own face frames, drawers, and doors - raised panel (made our own panels) with arch option, also made our own crown moulding in two optional sizes. So 5 large shapers, 3 with power feeds, planer, jointer, moulder, etc....
We also did a fair amount of popular for the houses with painted cabinets, if there were a couple of those jobs we could usually stretch the bits and blades for two weeks without issue.
But with a hickory job we had to change everything out before we started and they needed swapped out again at the end. So, one day instead of 10, and that's just for a kitchen.
If it was a bigger job, (they went hickory for the whole house) we most likely would have to swap them out in order to finish, which is more of a hassle because you have to match the setups exactly.
Maple, Cherry and Mahogany all had similar blade life as Oak, though I can only recall one Mahogany job in my time there. 4 or 5 Hickory jobs, all from the same smaller homebuilder - he did about a house a year.
Maple was probably a little harder on blades, but we only did the occasional Maple run - maybe once every couple months or so.
Couple of Birch and a Pine or two also, but I don't recall blade life on those so probably not out of the ordinary, but Hickory definitely stands out.
rrich, congrats on the dust collector - I would say you qualify for a 'you ****' on that one.
wrenchguy, nice slab, and love the old planer - 15"?
I still have yet to try the crappy old Ryobi 10" I got fairly cheaply and close by. It sounds fine. Have a little issue with the setup though. Apparently these came with a jig to set the blades separate from the machine and then you just drop them in. I don't have the jig and it doesn't seem to be available anymore.
I imagine I can make one if the blades currently in it are set up correctly.
I guess I've been kinda busy myself, but nothing woodworking/shop related sadly.
Between a tooth infection and my truck breaking down, work, and the basic everyday home stuff, just haven't had any time.
I will say if you happen to own a Ford 4.9 straight 6, be careful if you try to replace the distributor. Mine just sheared the pump gear roll pin, but I thought I'd go ahead and get a new distributor while they are still available.'
However all the new ones you can actually get seem to have a steel gear instead of the correct cast iron gear. Glad I caught that, otherwise it would chew up the gear cast into the cam in a few months.
So after chasing that around for a week I just put a new roll pin in my old one.
Jimreed, hickory is some hard stuff. Once in a great while at the cabinet shop we would do a house in it.
Mostly we used oak, and with that the blades in the majority of the tools would last a week and a half or so - generally we did a good sized house's cabinets in a day. Kitchen, master and guest bath, and a large entertainment center was the most common run.
We used plywood for the finished sides, but made our own face frames, drawers, and doors - raised panel (made our own panels) with arch option, also made our own crown moulding in two optional sizes. So 5 large shapers, 3 with power feeds, planer, jointer, moulder, etc....
We also did a fair amount of popular for the houses with painted cabinets, if there were a couple of those jobs we could usually stretch the bits and blades for two weeks without issue.
But with a hickory job we had to change everything out before we started and they needed swapped out again at the end. So, one day instead of 10, and that's just for a kitchen.
If it was a bigger job, (they went hickory for the whole house) we most likely would have to swap them out in order to finish, which is more of a hassle because you have to match the setups exactly.
Maple, Cherry and Mahogany all had similar blade life as Oak, though I can only recall one Mahogany job in my time there. 4 or 5 Hickory jobs, all from the same smaller homebuilder - he did about a house a year.
Maple was probably a little harder on blades, but we only did the occasional Maple run - maybe once every couple months or so.
Couple of Birch and a Pine or two also, but I don't recall blade life on those so probably not out of the ordinary, but Hickory definitely stands out.
rrich, congrats on the dust collector - I would say you qualify for a 'you ****' on that one.
wrenchguy, nice slab, and love the old planer - 15"?
I still have yet to try the crappy old Ryobi 10" I got fairly cheaply and close by. It sounds fine. Have a little issue with the setup though. Apparently these came with a jig to set the blades separate from the machine and then you just drop them in. I don't have the jig and it doesn't seem to be available anymore.
I imagine I can make one if the blades currently in it are set up correctly.
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