VB

"Vic Baron"

29/06/2005 6:53 PM

Craftsman 12" Portable Planer

I have an old ( 5 -6 years) Craftsman Planer. One of the knives has a small
nick that leaves a mark when used. I have a spare set of knives BUT a) I've
never changed planer knives before and b) looking at the manual, it seems I
must be a contortionist to get it correct.

Has anyone done this successfully and how?

Just in case I decide that I have more money than brains, what would be a
decent planer to buy for a small home w/s - no production use. Must be easy
to change blades <G>.?

Thanx,

Vic

--
There are 10 kinds of people - those who understand binary and those who
don't


This topic has 2 replies

Sb

"SonomaProducts.com"

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 29/06/2005 6:53 PM

30/06/2005 12:41 PM

If the blades are adjusted properly, then any nick that shows on the
finished piece must be in all the blades. One quick fix is to slide one
of the blades a little to one side so the nicks are not lined up.

I can't imagine buying a new planer is the best approach. I'd bet any
decent tool repair shop could swap the old for new blades for a lot
less than the price of a new planer if you can't get it done on your
own.

BW

VB

"Vic Baron"

in reply to "Vic Baron" on 29/06/2005 6:53 PM

01/07/2005 1:57 AM


"SonomaProducts.com" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> If the blades are adjusted properly, then any nick that shows on the
> finished piece must be in all the blades. One quick fix is to slide one
> of the blades a little to one side so the nicks are not lined up.
>
> I can't imagine buying a new planer is the best approach. I'd bet any
> decent tool repair shop could swap the old for new blades for a lot
> less than the price of a new planer if you can't get it done on your
> own.
>
> BW
>

I know! I know! - I was just grumbling. LOL

I'll take a shot at it on a day when I START out calm and relaxed.

Thanx,

Vic


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