EC

Electric Comet

31/03/2016 9:02 AM

Re: Table saw vibration.

On Wed, 30 Mar 2016 01:52:22 -0700 (PDT) km_slinger wrote:

> Larry thank you so very much i just restored my grizzly 1022 it looks

a contractor saw will tend to vibrate and some a lot more than others

the best solution would be to sell it and find a saw that does not
have vibration problems










This topic has 2 replies

Dt

DerbyDad03

in reply to Electric Comet on 31/03/2016 9:02 AM

31/03/2016 9:09 AM

On Thursday, March 31, 2016 at 11:05:51 AM UTC-4, Electric Comet wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Mar 2016 01:52:22 -0700 (PDT) km_slinger wrote:
>
> > Larry thank you so very much i just restored my grizzly 1022 it looks
>
> a contractor saw will tend to vibrate and some a lot more than others
>
> the best solution would be to sell it and find a saw that does not
> have vibration problems

Are you covering the extra cost? If so, I'm in!

Would you like to know where to send the check?

Are you doing all the work that would be required in my shop in order
to implement the new solution? If so, you can bring the check with you
when you come over.

umm...err...never mind. Just mail the check and toss in a little extra to
cover my labor.

ww

whit3rd

in reply to Electric Comet on 31/03/2016 9:02 AM

31/03/2016 1:00 PM

On Thursday, March 31, 2016 at 8:05:51 AM UTC-7, Electric Comet wrote:
> On Wed, 30 Mar 2016 01:52:22 -0700 (PDT) km_slinger wrote:

> a contractor saw will tend to vibrate and some a lot more than others

> the best solution would be to sell it and find a saw that does not
> have vibration problems

Quickest solution, maybe, but the best solution is to fix the problem.
The motor can be out-of-balance, or the blade/arbor, or the belt can
have an inflexible (bent or straight) spot. Any of these would drive vibration,
and that's the WHOLE list.

The only hard-to-fix issues would be bent motor or arbor shaft. Loose bearings
can be replaced, worn/damaged belt ditto. Eggshaped pulleys are replaceable, too.


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