I went to the auction today and there was an ancient 8" Craftsman table
saw with an extension table and a 4" jointer, all driven by the same
motor. I walked away from it, but it was a thin crowd and when I came
back it hadn't sold and $35 was too much of a temptation.
So, a 103.22160 King Seely saw, 103.23340 jointer with some small nicks
in the knives. It's all heavy as hell.
Do I leave this on the curb or drag it into the shop? What upgrades or
maintenance?
I have a sparse woodshop with a RAS and hand tools, I usually cut
plywood with a fence and a small circular as the RAS has a limited rip.
--
pentapus
I believe that qualifies as a you suck deal!
On 6/19/2014 4:48 PM, pentapus wrote:
> I went to the auction today and there was an ancient 8" Craftsman table
> saw with an extension table and a 4" jointer, all driven by the same
> motor. I walked away from it, but it was a thin crowd and when I came
> back it hadn't sold and $35 was too much of a temptation.
>
> So, a 103.22160 King Seely saw, 103.23340 jointer with some small nicks
> in the knives. It's all heavy as hell.
>
> Do I leave this on the curb or drag it into the shop? What upgrades or
> maintenance?
>
> I have a sparse woodshop with a RAS and hand tools, I usually cut
> plywood with a fence and a small circular as the RAS has a limited rip.
>
pentapus <[email protected]> wrote in news:lnvibg$dnf$1
@news.albasani.net:
> I went to the auction today and there was an ancient 8" Craftsman table
> saw with an extension table and a 4" jointer, all driven by the same
> motor. I walked away from it, but it was a thin crowd and when I came
> back it hadn't sold and $35 was too much of a temptation.
>
> So, a 103.22160 King Seely saw, 103.23340 jointer with some small nicks
> in the knives. It's all heavy as hell.
>
> Do I leave this on the curb or drag it into the shop? What upgrades or
> maintenance?
>
> I have a sparse woodshop with a RAS and hand tools, I usually cut
> plywood with a fence and a small circular as the RAS has a limited rip.
>
Sounds like you bought yourself a project. I usually enjoy projects like
this, it's fun getting a tool going again especially when there's nothing
to lose.
Many of these projects start out with giving the tool an indepth
cleaning. A nylon brush and old toothbrush will come in handy, and some
sandpaper may be necessary. Metal bristle brushes are useful, but can
scratch surfaces.
Puckdropper
--
Make it to fit, don't make it fit.
Drag it in and set it up. It has to be better than a stick in the eye!
"pentapus" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I went to the auction today and there was an ancient 8" Craftsman table
> saw with an extension table and a 4" jointer, all driven by the same
> motor.> Do I leave this on the curb or drag it into the shop? What
> upgrades or maintenance?
>
Drag it in and set it up. It has to be better than a stick in the eye!
--
Jim in NC
---
This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active.
http://www.avast.com
On 6/19/2014 3:48 PM, pentapus wrote:
> I went to the auction today and there was an ancient 8" Craftsman table
> saw with an extension table and a 4" jointer, all driven by the same
> motor. I walked away from it, but it was a thin crowd and when I came
> back it hadn't sold and $35 was too much of a temptation.
>
> So, a 103.22160 King Seely saw, 103.23340 jointer with some small nicks
> in the knives. It's all heavy as hell.
>
> Do I leave this on the curb or drag it into the shop? What upgrades or
> maintenance?
>
> I have a sparse woodshop with a RAS and hand tools, I usually cut
> plywood with a fence and a small circular as the RAS has a limited rip.
Unless you build a good-size outfeed table, you'll still be cutting
(full-sheet) ply w/ the handsaw, but they're a decent little saw...and
the price was right, for sure. :)
<http://vintagemachinery.org/photoindex/detail.aspx?id=17827>
<http://vintagemachinery.org/photoindex/detail.aspx?id=10746>
I had the jointer's 6" big brother as my first jointer some 45 yr
ago...other than being a little short on the tables and the outfeed
table being somewhat of a pain to adjust as it's mounted on four studs
instead of ways, it's a very solid little jointer. Certainly up to most
anything of the current import generation as to what it can do for the size.
--
On 6/19/2014 3:48 PM, pentapus wrote:
> I went to the auction today and there was an ancient 8" Craftsman table
> saw with an extension table and a 4" jointer, all driven by the same
> motor. I walked away from it, but it was a thin crowd and when I came
> back it hadn't sold and $35 was too much of a temptation.
>
> So, a 103.22160 King Seely saw, 103.23340 jointer with some small nicks
> in the knives. It's all heavy as hell.
>
> Do I leave this on the curb or drag it into the shop? What upgrades or
> maintenance?
>
> I have a sparse woodshop with a RAS and hand tools, I usually cut
> plywood with a fence and a small circular as the RAS has a limited rip.
>
Back in the day - these were the go to tool for any trim carpenter. The
tools still do the same job.
--
___________________________________
Keep the whole world singing . . .
Dan G
remove the seven