I have a Central Machinery 10" planer that I picked up at a garage sale
a few months ago. So far it has worked well for me. However, this
weekend I was squaring up a lot of wood for a workbench top and noticed
the planer was leaking oil on the left side of the machine. This was
the most continuous cutting I've done done with it, but I have not
noticed a leak before. It leaked about a 1/4 cup of oil.
Does anyone have any ideas as to what I should look at to fix this? It
may be a while before I can replace it with a better quality machine,
so I need to keep this one alive for a while longer.
Thanks,
Richard
Here is a picture of the machine:
http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/Displayitem.taf?itemnumber=41921
"Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a Central Machinery 10" planer that I picked up at a garage sale
> a few months ago. So far it has worked well for me. However, this
> weekend I was squaring up a lot of wood for a workbench top and noticed
> the planer was leaking oil on the left side of the machine. This was
> the most continuous cutting I've done done with it, but I have not
> noticed a leak before. It leaked about a 1/4 cup of oil.
>
> Does anyone have any ideas as to what I should look at to fix this? It
> may be a while before I can replace it with a better quality machine,
> so I need to keep this one alive for a while longer.
>
> Thanks,
> Richard
>
> Here is a picture of the machine:
> http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/Displayitem.taf?itemnumber=41921
>
>
I doubt that (I hesitate to call it a machine) planer could not possibly
have oil in it. It only has pre-greased bearings. Look for other sources
of the oil. Maybe wet wood?
I have a Jet 12" planer that has planed 1000's of board feet with zero
problems (other that new blades). I've have decided to replace it as soon
as it breaks. But then again, that was three years ago. It was only $300+.
Dave
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I think you hit the nail on the head. I could understand a small amount
of grease building up, but the large amount of oil had me worried that
something serious was wrong. I knew when I bought it that it wasn't the
best planer, but I couldn't figure what in the planer would even hold
that much oil.
It didn't occur to me to blame the wood for the mess, but I'm sure that
is exactly what it is. The wood I was using was salvaged from a large
construction site many years ago. The wood was used for some roofing in
the Nike Campus in Oregon. It was treated with oil. On the surface,
this wood is in pretty bad shape, but inside it is in great shape. I
ended up with a bunch of it, but this is the first time I tried to use
it for anything.
Thanks for all the help!
Richard
Teamcasa wrote:
> I doubt that (I hesitate to call it a machine) planer could not possibly
> have oil in it. It only has pre-greased bearings. Look for other sources
> of the oil. Maybe wet wood?
>
> I have a Jet 12" planer that has planed 1000's of board feet with zero
> problems (other that new blades). I've have decided to replace it as soon
> as it breaks. But then again, that was three years ago. It was only $300+.
>
> Dave
>
>
>
> Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY **
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> http://www.usenet.com
When I use the planer, I am outside in front of my shop, so I know the
mess came from the planer - this time, at least. To put things in
perspective, when I was cleaning up, my 4 year old son came running out
fo the house totally naked to help me put the tools away. Consiquently,
I would not be surprised by just about any mess I find around the house
:)
Thanks,
Richard
Nova wrote:
> Doug Miller wrote:
>
> >
> > Doubtful that there was 1/4 cup of oil in it to begin with, or indeed any oil
> > at all.
> >
> > I'm betting that:
> > a) your shop is in your basement;
> > b) your household includes a dog or small boy; and
> > c) that ain't oil that dripped onto your planer from the floor above.
> >
>
>
> I have a basement shop and two golden retrievers. When the youngest
> golden was a puppy it liked the spot in the foyer directly over my new
> cabinet saw ;-(
>
> --
> Jack Novak
> Buffalo, NY - USA
> [email protected]
Richard wrote:
> I have a Central Machinery 10" planer that I picked up at a garage sale
> a few months ago. So far it has worked well for me. However, this
> weekend I was squaring up a lot of wood for a workbench top and noticed
> the planer was leaking oil on the left side of the machine. This was
> the most continuous cutting I've done done with it, but I have not
> noticed a leak before. It leaked about a 1/4 cup of oil.
>
> Does anyone have any ideas as to what I should look at to fix this? It
> may be a while before I can replace it with a better quality machine,
> so I need to keep this one alive for a while longer.
>
> Thanks,
> Richard
>
> Here is a picture of the machine:
> http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/Displayitem.taf?itemnumber=41921
>
The unit has sealed bearings and a light coating of grease on the table
support rods, each end of the cutter head, the drive chain and the table
height chain.
If you've found 1/4 cup of oil on the left side of the planer start
looking overhead for what's dripping?
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
In article <[email protected]>,
Richard <[email protected]> wrote:
> I think you hit the nail on the head. I could understand a small amount
> of grease building up, but the large amount of oil had me worried that
> something serious was wrong. I knew when I bought it that it wasn't the
> best planer, but I couldn't figure what in the planer would even hold
> that much oil.
>
> It didn't occur to me to blame the wood for the mess, but I'm sure that
> is exactly what it is. The wood I was using was salvaged from a large
> construction site many years ago. The wood was used for some roofing in
> the Nike Campus in Oregon. It was treated with oil. On the surface,
> this wood is in pretty bad shape, but inside it is in great shape. I
> ended up with a bunch of it, but this is the first time I tried to use
> it for anything.
sounds like one of those machines they use to extract olive oil from
olives
Doug Miller wrote:
>
> Doubtful that there was 1/4 cup of oil in it to begin with, or indeed any oil
> at all.
>
> I'm betting that:
> a) your shop is in your basement;
> b) your household includes a dog or small boy; and
> c) that ain't oil that dripped onto your planer from the floor above.
>
I have a basement shop and two golden retrievers. When the youngest
golden was a puppy it liked the spot in the foyer directly over my new
cabinet saw ;-(
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
In article <[email protected]>, "Richard" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I have a Central Machinery 10" planer that I picked up at a garage sale
>a few months ago. So far it has worked well for me. However, this
>weekend I was squaring up a lot of wood for a workbench top and noticed
>the planer was leaking oil on the left side of the machine. This was
>the most continuous cutting I've done done with it, but I have not
>noticed a leak before. It leaked about a 1/4 cup of oil.
Doubtful that there was 1/4 cup of oil in it to begin with, or indeed any oil
at all.
I'm betting that:
a) your shop is in your basement;
b) your household includes a dog or small boy; and
c) that ain't oil that dripped onto your planer from the floor above.
--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)
It's time to throw all their damned tea in the harbor again.
Your manual calls for putting grease on the bottom chain under the planner.
It also calls for oiling the drive chains (lightly). Since this is a used
machine I would check everything that moves and give it a shot of WD 40 to
see if it has any grease on it and then reoil or grease as needed per the
manual. You can download the manual from HF's website. There was no gear
box that I could see on the item, but check for one anyway just to be sure
that you don't have one that is leaking. Sounds to me like some one may
have over oiled the machine at some time. JMO for what it is worth
"Richard" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I have a Central Machinery 10" planer that I picked up at a garage sale
> a few months ago. So far it has worked well for me. However, this
> weekend I was squaring up a lot of wood for a workbench top and noticed
> the planer was leaking oil on the left side of the machine. This was
> the most continuous cutting I've done done with it, but I have not
> noticed a leak before. It leaked about a 1/4 cup of oil.
>
> Does anyone have any ideas as to what I should look at to fix this? It
> may be a while before I can replace it with a better quality machine,
> so I need to keep this one alive for a while longer.
>
> Thanks,
> Richard
>
> Here is a picture of the machine:
> http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/ctaf/Displayitem.taf?itemnumber=41921
>