I thought I would try here first before an ad on eBay.
I have an old Craftsman King-Seeley table saw I would like to find a new
home for. Its a model number 103.22160 with a motor 115.7556 Type CRI80K9.
Its a belt driven saw, 1950s vintage, I think. It has a heavy cast top and
extension wing, original fence, and miter gauge. 110V
http://www.oldwwmachines.com/MfgIndex/Detail.asp?ID=497 << King-Seeley info
Sears info http://www3.sears.com paste in model number.
It currently lives in Phoenixville, PA 19460.
All offers will be considered, I reserve the right to not accept any of
them. I am willing to crate and ship if you are willing to pick up the cost.
Its a heavy beast. Weight is in excess of 100lbs is my guess. I will also
deliver within reasonable drive. Pick-up at my garashop may be a good
option.
When I got it, it had a home made rolling cabinet with the motor mounted
below. For space reasons I ditched the rolling platform and mounted the saw
to and motor to a piece of plywood. The motor is now hanging from the rear.
The saw could use a nice link belt and alignment to cut vibration. It could
also use a front mount switch versus the motor mounted switch setup and a
new blade. There is no blade guard, I don't think it ever had one.
I will monitor this group and also my e-mail.
sawforsale@peppel_IHateSpam.com loose the _IHateSpam.
Thanks for looking. Fire away the questions. I will be quick to reply.
> When I got it, it had a home made rolling cabinet with the motor mounted
> below. For space reasons I ditched the rolling platform and mounted the
saw
> to and motor to a piece of plywood. The motor is now hanging from the
rear.
> The saw could use a nice link belt and alignment to cut vibration. It
could
> also use a front mount switch versus the motor mounted switch setup and a
> new blade. There is no blade guard, I don't think it ever had one.
If I owned a saw in that condition I'd be too embarrassed to put it up for
sale.
> <grin> The table is nice, heavy and flat. Everything seems solid. The
> plywood base is fine and makes it more of a benchtop design. It can be
used
> as is although would perform better, and safer, with the suggested
> modifications.
You're not concerned about potential liability issues from knowingly selling
unsafe power tools?
<grin> The table is nice, heavy and flat. Everything seems solid. The
plywood base is fine and makes it more of a benchtop design. It can be used
as is although would perform better, and safer, with the suggested
modifications.
"mp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> > When I got it, it had a home made rolling cabinet with the motor mounted
> > below. For space reasons I ditched the rolling platform and mounted the
> saw
> > to and motor to a piece of plywood. The motor is now hanging from the
> rear.
> > The saw could use a nice link belt and alignment to cut vibration. It
> could
> > also use a front mount switch versus the motor mounted switch setup and
a
> > new blade. There is no blade guard, I don't think it ever had one.
>
>
> If I owned a saw in that condition I'd be too embarrassed to put it up for
> sale.
>
>
Nope - It works as designed, its not inherently unsafe. It could just be
made safer.
"mp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> > <grin> The table is nice, heavy and flat. Everything seems solid. The
> > plywood base is fine and makes it more of a benchtop design. It can be
> used
> > as is although would perform better, and safer, with the suggested
> > modifications.
>
> You're not concerned about potential liability issues from knowingly
selling
> unsafe power tools?
>
>
So, you want it? The more and more I write about it I am second guessing
myself. Maybe I really don't want to sell it. Its such a great tool! I
really did make some cool stuff with it before it was retired!
"mp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> > <grin> The table is nice, heavy and flat. Everything seems solid. The
> > plywood base is fine and makes it more of a benchtop design. It can be
> used
> > as is although would perform better, and safer, with the suggested
> > modifications.
>
> You're not concerned about potential liability issues from knowingly
selling
> unsafe power tools?
>
>
I guess I'm impatient. Also posted on OWWM
http://www.owwm.com/cgi-bin/classifieds/classifieds.pl?website=&search_and_display_db_button=on&db_id=1677&exact_match=on&query=retrieval
"Brikp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I thought I would try here first before an ad on eBay.
>
> I have an old Craftsman King-Seeley table saw I would like to find a new
> home for. Its a model number 103.22160 with a motor 115.7556 Type
CRI80K9.
> Its a belt driven saw, 1950s vintage, I think. It has a heavy cast top and
> extension wing, original fence, and miter gauge. 110V
>
> http://www.oldwwmachines.com/MfgIndex/Detail.asp?ID=497 << King-Seeley
info
> Sears info http://www3.sears.com paste in model number.
>
> It currently lives in Phoenixville, PA 19460.
>
> All offers will be considered, I reserve the right to not accept any of
> them. I am willing to crate and ship if you are willing to pick up the
cost.
> Its a heavy beast. Weight is in excess of 100lbs is my guess. I will also
> deliver within reasonable drive. Pick-up at my garashop may be a good
> option.
>
> When I got it, it had a home made rolling cabinet with the motor mounted
> below. For space reasons I ditched the rolling platform and mounted the
saw
> to and motor to a piece of plywood. The motor is now hanging from the
rear.
> The saw could use a nice link belt and alignment to cut vibration. It
could
> also use a front mount switch versus the motor mounted switch setup and a
> new blade. There is no blade guard, I don't think it ever had one.
>
> I will monitor this group and also my e-mail.
> sawforsale@peppel_IHateSpam.com loose the _IHateSpam.
>
> Thanks for looking. Fire away the questions. I will be quick to reply.
>
>
I am flexible on the price and will consider ALL offers. Could even be the
cost of a beer to a good home.
Motor works fine. Can be wired to run clockwise and counter-clockwise, not
sure if it can be wired to run on 220 though.
Make an offer.
"RonB" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:YoG3d.71062$mu.37623@okepread07...
> Pessimists view:
>
> I finally sold an old Craftsman TS after several weeks of lowering the
> price. By the time I actually sold it I was seriously considering
stripping
> it and taking it to a scrap iron dealer and getting a few bucks for the
iron
> table and trunnions. Before you do that, salvage hardware, acme screw
> threads, handles, switch, etc. The miter gage will probably work on other
> tools with a miter slot (Example: the old Craftsman miter gage was better
> than the cheapy that came with my band saw). If the motor is good you
will
> eventually come up with a need for one.
>
> Before I stripped it I sold it to a local trim carpenter who had just
> dropped his ancient Delta off the back of his pickup.
>
>
Still available. I will e-mail you.
"lobomike" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:cNf4d.33086$aW5.28540@fed1read07...
> Tried emailing you but it bounced. Respond offline if the saw is still
> available.
>
> --
> LoboMike
>
>
> "Experience is a hard teacher...
> she gives the test first, and the lesson second."
>
>
> "Brikp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> >I thought I would try here first before an ad on eBay.
> >
> > I have an old Craftsman King-Seeley table saw I would like to find a new
> > home for. Its a model number 103.22160 with a motor 115.7556 Type
> > CRI80K9.
> > Its a belt driven saw, 1950s vintage, I think. It has a heavy cast top
and
> > extension wing, original fence, and miter gauge. 110V
> >
> > http://www.oldwwmachines.com/MfgIndex/Detail.asp?ID=497 << King-Seeley
> > info
> > Sears info http://www3.sears.com paste in model number.
> >
> > It currently lives in Phoenixville, PA 19460.
> >
> > All offers will be considered, I reserve the right to not accept any of
> > them. I am willing to crate and ship if you are willing to pick up the
> > cost.
> > Its a heavy beast. Weight is in excess of 100lbs is my guess. I will
also
> > deliver within reasonable drive. Pick-up at my garashop may be a good
> > option.
> >
> > When I got it, it had a home made rolling cabinet with the motor mounted
> > below. For space reasons I ditched the rolling platform and mounted the
> > saw
> > to and motor to a piece of plywood. The motor is now hanging from the
> > rear.
> > The saw could use a nice link belt and alignment to cut vibration. It
> > could
> > also use a front mount switch versus the motor mounted switch setup and
a
> > new blade. There is no blade guard, I don't think it ever had one.
> >
> > I will monitor this group and also my e-mail.
> > sawforsale@peppel_IHateSpam.com loose the _IHateSpam.
> >
> > Thanks for looking. Fire away the questions. I will be quick to reply.
> >
> >
>
>
I will now be unable to respond to inquiries about this saw until late next
week. I am heading to FL to help with some disaster relief. (All proceeds
from the saw will be used to cover any expenses incurred!!!)
"Brikp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I thought I would try here first before an ad on eBay.
>
> I have an old Craftsman King-Seeley table saw I would like to find a new
> home for. Its a model number 103.22160 with a motor 115.7556 Type
CRI80K9.
> Its a belt driven saw, 1950s vintage, I think. It has a heavy cast top and
> extension wing, original fence, and miter gauge. 110V
>
> http://www.oldwwmachines.com/MfgIndex/Detail.asp?ID=497 << King-Seeley
info
> Sears info http://www3.sears.com paste in model number.
>
> It currently lives in Phoenixville, PA 19460.
>
> All offers will be considered, I reserve the right to not accept any of
> them. I am willing to crate and ship if you are willing to pick up the
cost.
> Its a heavy beast. Weight is in excess of 100lbs is my guess. I will also
> deliver within reasonable drive. Pick-up at my garashop may be a good
> option.
>
> When I got it, it had a home made rolling cabinet with the motor mounted
> below. For space reasons I ditched the rolling platform and mounted the
saw
> to and motor to a piece of plywood. The motor is now hanging from the
rear.
> The saw could use a nice link belt and alignment to cut vibration. It
could
> also use a front mount switch versus the motor mounted switch setup and a
> new blade. There is no blade guard, I don't think it ever had one.
>
> I will monitor this group and also my e-mail.
> sawforsale@peppel_IHateSpam.com loose the _IHateSpam.
>
> Thanks for looking. Fire away the questions. I will be quick to reply.
>
>
Pessimists view:
I finally sold an old Craftsman TS after several weeks of lowering the
price. By the time I actually sold it I was seriously considering stripping
it and taking it to a scrap iron dealer and getting a few bucks for the iron
table and trunnions. Before you do that, salvage hardware, acme screw
threads, handles, switch, etc. The miter gage will probably work on other
tools with a miter slot (Example: the old Craftsman miter gage was better
than the cheapy that came with my band saw). If the motor is good you will
eventually come up with a need for one.
Before I stripped it I sold it to a local trim carpenter who had just
dropped his ancient Delta off the back of his pickup.
Tried emailing you but it bounced. Respond offline if the saw is still
available.
--
LoboMike
"Experience is a hard teacher...
she gives the test first, and the lesson second."
"Brikp" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I thought I would try here first before an ad on eBay.
>
> I have an old Craftsman King-Seeley table saw I would like to find a new
> home for. Its a model number 103.22160 with a motor 115.7556 Type
> CRI80K9.
> Its a belt driven saw, 1950s vintage, I think. It has a heavy cast top and
> extension wing, original fence, and miter gauge. 110V
>
> http://www.oldwwmachines.com/MfgIndex/Detail.asp?ID=497 << King-Seeley
> info
> Sears info http://www3.sears.com paste in model number.
>
> It currently lives in Phoenixville, PA 19460.
>
> All offers will be considered, I reserve the right to not accept any of
> them. I am willing to crate and ship if you are willing to pick up the
> cost.
> Its a heavy beast. Weight is in excess of 100lbs is my guess. I will also
> deliver within reasonable drive. Pick-up at my garashop may be a good
> option.
>
> When I got it, it had a home made rolling cabinet with the motor mounted
> below. For space reasons I ditched the rolling platform and mounted the
> saw
> to and motor to a piece of plywood. The motor is now hanging from the
> rear.
> The saw could use a nice link belt and alignment to cut vibration. It
> could
> also use a front mount switch versus the motor mounted switch setup and a
> new blade. There is no blade guard, I don't think it ever had one.
>
> I will monitor this group and also my e-mail.
> sawforsale@peppel_IHateSpam.com loose the _IHateSpam.
>
> Thanks for looking. Fire away the questions. I will be quick to reply.
>
>