Broke down at the orange BORG today and grabbed their last one while
the lifetime service deal is still out there. Plan to either build a
base on casters or order out one of the HTC adjustable bases. My gar,
uh shop, forces me to roll it around with the table at 90 egress to
the direction of travel 'cause the long dimension has to go against
the wall and fore-aft travel is restricted by shelves. That's not the
way I'd usually set up a heavy tool. I'd also like to raise it up to a
more normal working height so the table's at ~30", not 24". But that
puts the center of gravity awfully high, I think.
Anyone got any experience with either the HTC base under this jointer
or, more generally, bases set to move at 90 degrees to the long side?
How about the raise it up issue?
Any thoughts welcomed.
Regards.
I think mine is set up just the way you want it but I'm not the one
responsible. I bought my jointer from fellow wreck-er B a r r y, who
constructed a little plywood base that the machine is attached to. It
accomplishes two things at the same time. First, it raises the working
height of the table by about 4 inches. I find that to be a very comfortable
working level. Second, there is an opening in that base just large enough
to slide in a hand-truck. Then the tool can be fairly easily moved about.
When I first bought this jointer I had a hell of a time getting it out of my
van and into my garage/workshop (an ordeal chronicled in Woodcraft Magazine
volume 1, issue 1) but thanks to Barry's homebrew engineering I have no
trouble singlehandedly transporting it around the shop.
If I get a chance I'll snap a picture or two and post a link.
Lee
--
To e-mail, replace "bucketofspam" with "dleegordon"
_________________________________
Lee Gordon
http://www.leegordonproductions.com
Nice!
"Tom Banes" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Sun, 2 Oct 2005 05:57:50 -0400, "Thomas Bunetta"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
><snip>
<<It's good to hear the jointer's still working out well. It was a lot of
fun getting it up into your van!>>
It was even more "fun" getting it out. BTW, just yesterday the guy I
recruited to help me horse it off the truck finally got his revenge. He
asked me to help him move some furniture from his old apartment in Vernon to
his new one in West Hartford. I originally recruited this guy because he's
a pretty decent athlete and can out drive me on the golf course by a great
many yards. I discovered, first with the jointer and again yesterday with
some sofas, that lifting is not his strong suit. I now feel better about
myself knowing that it was his wimpiness more than my own that required a
3rd helper to get the damn thing down from the van.
I too am a form-over-function guy when it comes to jigs, etc. I have never
had a problem with the appearance of your homemade base which, after all,
spends its life sitting on the garage floor.
Lee
--
To e-mail, replace "bucketofspam" with "dleegordon"
_________________________________
Lee Gordon
http://www.leegordonproductions.com
On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 17:17:23 -0400, "Lee Gordon"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>As promised, here are links to a few pictures of the pedestal on my jointer
>(formerly Barry's jointer).
<<<<<<<<<<<<<< SNIP >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
Lee:
Thanks, got it. Hand truck I don't have, but Just finished something
not dissimilar on HD casters.
Interesting that Barry decided to bolt the jointer down throuh the
holes designed for the leveling feet. That's my plan when I put it up
in the AM.
Regards.
On Fri, 30 Sep 2005 05:38:03 -0400, "Thomas Bunetta"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>
>> Check out ABPW... I posted a picture of my *" on a homemade mobile base.
>> Tom
>>
>Typing in the dark... should be "8" jointer"
>Tom
Tom:
Already translated the * to 8 - I make that goof all the time, even
with the light on.
Questions:
Casters look to be 3" and all 4 swivel. Is that about right?
WTH are the bricks for? Extra weight low on the base for stability?
I assume the casters have a swivel and roll lock. Is that enough to
keep the jointer from moving as you pass a board through it?
BTW. I cheated getting mine off the truck. I unboxed it in the bed and
only the table itself was unduly heavy. How I'll get it up on a
rolling stand - ah, I'm cogitating even now. Something with levers and
rollers and an inclined plane I suspect. The way the pyramids were
done.
Regards.
On Sun, 2 Oct 2005 05:57:50 -0400, "Thomas Bunetta"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>The casters are 3" all swivel and locking... don't need the locks, mass and
>inertia work in my favor even face jointing the full 8".
>
Tom:
Got it done this weekend. Mobile and all. Didn't follow assembly
instructions from Ridgid as I assembeled the machine on the base.
Bill, my nieghbor (a Brit and a good guy) helped lift the bed onto
the stand after it was bolted down. It's all solid as a rock once I
lock the "front" casters. THe rear ones are rigid, the front are
all-locking 3" swivels. It moves easily, tucks neatly into its little
corner.
Pics are at
http://web2.airmail.net/xleanone/index.html/Jointer%20&%20Shop/
as well as pics of the "shop in service and at rest, ready for 2 cars
to invade. Next (?) project is a "proper" bench that I can wheel out
and back in. The existing one is fixed, though the cabinet underneath
it is on wheels, my assembly/infeed/whatever table. You NEVER have
enough drawers!
Regards.
Tom
Lee Gordon wrote:
> If I get a chance I'll snap a picture or two and post a link.
>
It's good to hear the jointer's still working out well. It was a lot of
fun getting it up into your van!
Before you post pictures, let me point out that I spend NO time
whatsoever on making shop jigs and fixtures pretty. <G>
Barry
<snip>> Questions:
>
> Casters look to be 3" and all 4 swivel. Is that about right?
>
> WTH are the bricks for? Extra weight low on the base for stability?
>
> I assume the casters have a swivel and roll lock. Is that enough to
> keep the jointer from moving as you pass a board through it?
>
> BTW. I cheated getting mine off the truck. I unboxed it in the bed and
> only the table itself was unduly heavy. How I'll get it up on a
> rolling stand - ah, I'm cogitating even now. Something with levers and
> rollers and an inclined plane I suspect. The way the pyramids were
> done.
>
> Regards.
The casters are 3" all swivel and locking... don't need the locks, mass and
inertia work in my favor even face jointing the full 8".
The bricks are me making use of an out of the way horizontal surface... they
have now been wrapped with rags and duct tape to make weights for whatever a
la DJM.
I hung a come-along from roof trusses and picked the top up enough to roll
the base beneath it.
Tom
As promised, here are links to a few pictures of the pedestal on my jointer
(formerly Barry's jointer). The first shows the overall construction.
Nothing fancy, just 2x4s with 3/4" particle board top and bottom. Those
plus a couple of other details result in the entire jointer being about 6"
higher off the ground than the way it comes from the Borg.
www.leegordonproductions.com/jointer/jointerbase1.jpg
This picture gives a little closer look at the 2 slats Barry included on the
bottom which both prevents the whole thing from wobbling on a not perfectly
flat floor, and allows the insertion of a hand truck for relatively easy
transport.
www.leegordonproductions.com/jointer/jointerbase2.jpg
And here is a more detailed look at one of the attachment points which
connect the legs of the unit to the top of the base.
www.leegordonproductions.com/jointer/jointerbase3.jpg
If for some reason these links don't work for you, let me know and I'll post
alternates.
Lee
--
To e-mail, replace "bucketofspam" with "dleegordon"
_________________________________
Lee Gordon
http://www.leegordonproductions.com