Nn

Nobody_special

10/10/2005 9:42 AM

Woodworking Karma

In woodworking things must balance.

Example:

Last week I got a delta drill press off the local freecycle
list. Needs a new spring to raise the quill, but otherwise
seems fine. Certainly worth the gas to pick it up.

Last night I was testing out the new panel-raising bit
so I might finally complete my armoire after ~4yrs.
Everything was going great- nice smooth test cuts in
my plywood scrap, taking small bites. Then I raised it
one last time to get the top edge, turned the router
back on, and it bound up on the fence. It seems I hadn't
raised the bit high enough when shaping the notch in the fence.

Quick, turn it off. NO, you moron, that's the lock lever...
ok, now it's off after it already stopped turning. Hmm..
did it blow the breaker or the router? Turn it back on..
all the magic smoke is exiting my Hitachi M12V.

*sigh* Karma.

So, anyone know if the controller boards are replaceable
in a Hitachi M12V? My quick dig through my manual pile
didn't find the right one last night. Then I just left the
shop in disgust/before I broke anything else.

--
Nobody Special
Chandler, AZ


This topic has 3 replies

MP

"Mark Proulx"

in reply to Nobody_special on 10/10/2005 9:42 AM

11/10/2005 4:07 AM

Sorry to hear of your experience. You deserve much credit for throwing in
the towel when you did. I know lots of people who would stubbornly continue
working on something else only to cut off their fingers - or worse.

Mark Proulx
Des Moines, WA

"Nobody_special" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In woodworking things must balance.
>
> Example:
>
> Last week I got a delta drill press off the local freecycle
> list. Needs a new spring to raise the quill, but otherwise
> seems fine. Certainly worth the gas to pick it up.
>
> Last night I was testing out the new panel-raising bit
> so I might finally complete my armoire after ~4yrs.
> Everything was going great- nice smooth test cuts in
> my plywood scrap, taking small bites. Then I raised it
> one last time to get the top edge, turned the router
> back on, and it bound up on the fence. It seems I hadn't
> raised the bit high enough when shaping the notch in the fence.
>
> Quick, turn it off. NO, you moron, that's the lock lever...
> ok, now it's off after it already stopped turning. Hmm..
> did it blow the breaker or the router? Turn it back on..
> all the magic smoke is exiting my Hitachi M12V.
>
> *sigh* Karma.
>
> So, anyone know if the controller boards are replaceable
> in a Hitachi M12V? My quick dig through my manual pile
> didn't find the right one last night. Then I just left the
> shop in disgust/before I broke anything else.
>
> --
> Nobody Special
> Chandler, AZ
>

nn

"no(SPAM)vasys" <"no(SPAM)vasys"@adelphia.net>

in reply to Nobody_special on 10/10/2005 9:42 AM

10/10/2005 1:32 PM

Nobody_special wrote:

> So, anyone know if the controller boards are replaceable
> in a Hitachi M12V? My quick dig through my manual pile
> didn't find the right one last night. Then I just left the
> shop in disgust/before I broke anything else.

Yes although the controller board is about $105.00. See:

http://www.toolpartsdirect.com/cgi-bin/schematic.cgi/hitachi/M12V


--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
[email protected]
(Remove -SPAM- to send email)

Nn

Nobody_special

in reply to Nobody_special on 10/10/2005 9:42 AM

10/10/2005 3:32 PM

no(SPAM)vasys wrote:
> Nobody_special wrote:
>
>> So, anyone know if the controller boards are replaceable
>> in a Hitachi M12V? My quick dig through my manual pile
>> didn't find the right one last night. Then I just left the
>> shop in disgust/before I broke anything else.
>
>
> Yes although the controller board is about $105.00. See:
>
> http://www.toolpartsdirect.com/cgi-bin/schematic.cgi/hitachi/M12V
>
>
Thanks. All the docs on the hitachi site are broken links.

--
Nobody Special
Chandler, AZ


You’ve reached the end of replies