Phisherman wrote:
> I have a cast aluminum blast gate and want to connect this to a
> Powermatic 66 dust port. The diameters are the same and the blast
> gate is slightly tapered. These are slightly less than 4" in diameter
> and both ports have about 3/4" to fasten a connector of some kind.
> Any ideas? Thanks.
A short piece of 4" D Schedule 40, a couple of sheet metal screws and some
"Duct Seal".
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
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"Phisherman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a cast aluminum blast gate and want to connect this to a
> Powermatic 66 dust port. The diameters are the same and the blast
> gate is slightly tapered. These are slightly less than 4" in diameter
> and both ports have about 3/4" to fasten a connector of some kind.
> Any ideas? Thanks.
Duct tape?
You can use a short length of flex pipe that will fit over both, or a short
length of PVC drain pipe that also will fit over both and then screw or pop
rivet them.
On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 20:45:57 GMT, Unisaw A100 <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Got a lathe? Attach a piece of something/anything to a face
>plate (I prefer a screw center) and turn one side part way
>through to one diameter. Flip it over and turn the other
>side to the other diameter (nothing is exactly the same
>diameter).
>
>Be a wee bit more careful when you get within the last 64th.
>of an inch at the middle.
>
>Paint to match the machine or go for an aluminum finish by
>gilding with some Reynold's Wrap.
>
>UA100
I used a scrap piece of 2x6 pine mounted on a faceplate and turned it
today just as suggested. The first turning was to fit the PM66 dust
port. I drilled a pilot through the three mounting holes of the
faceplate to get the same center on the other side of the 2x6. Then I
turned the blast gate side. It fits great! I spray painted it with
some aluminum paint to match the blast gate, and tomorrow I'll fit it
together and seal with some silicon cement. Thanks!
>I used a scrap piece of 2x6 pine mounted on a faceplate and turned it
>today just as suggested. The first turning was to fit the PM66 dust
>port. I drilled a pilot through the three mounting holes of the
>faceplate to get the same center on the other side of the 2x6. Then I
>turned the blast gate side. It fits great! I spray painted it with
>some aluminum paint to match the blast gate, and tomorrow I'll fit it
>together and seal with some silicon cement. Thanks!
I got to thinking about this and was wondering, cocobolo
with the aluminum paint? :-)
Nice thing about the lathe is you can sneak up on the
opening at the pipe side for a friction fit.
UA100
On Sun, 29 Aug 2004 20:45:57 GMT, Unisaw A100 <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Got a lathe? Attach a piece of something/anything to a face
>plate (I prefer a screw center) and turn one side part way
>through to one diameter. Flip it over and turn the other
>side to the other diameter (nothing is exactly the same
>diameter).
>
>Be a wee bit more careful when you get within the last 64th.
>of an inch at the middle.
>
>Paint to match the machine or go for an aluminum finish by
>gilding with some Reynold's Wrap.
>
>UA100
Great idea! Yes, I have a Conover lathe, plenty of scrap wood pieces,
a few face plates, and a can of aluminum paint. This should make a
sturdy and tight connection, exactly what I'm looking for. Thanks!
Got a lathe? Attach a piece of something/anything to a face
plate (I prefer a screw center) and turn one side part way
through to one diameter. Flip it over and turn the other
side to the other diameter (nothing is exactly the same
diameter).
Be a wee bit more careful when you get within the last 64th.
of an inch at the middle.
Paint to match the machine or go for an aluminum finish by
gilding with some Reynold's Wrap.
UA100