Hello everyone,
I have had this sitting around work for a month or so,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14head.jpg
waiting for me to find a chance to bring my planer in from home and install
this new Byrd Shelix cutterhead. This is the first one Byrd has made for a
General 130, so I hope this goes well.
I finally brought my planer in this week,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14start.jpg
First step, drain oil,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14drainoil.jpg
and remove dust hood.
I next removed the pulley from the cutterhead and was about to remove the
three screws that hold bearing cap to the side of the planer when I noticed
this,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14doubleblack.jpg
Hmmm. The head was larger than my black robbie screwdriver. This is a tool
store, I have to have one around somewhere... After 15 minutes of looking I
gave up and decided to make one. I don't know what it was that I started
with, but we have a bin of them at work, so 5 minutes later on a bench
grinder I made a robbie bit that would take out the screw,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14doubleblack2.jpg
Now I was able to take the screws out that hold the bearing cap in place.
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14bearingcap.jpg
I took the gear housing apart so I could take the nut off the end of the
shaft that holds a small worm gear in place. I used a tiny puller to get it
off,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14pullingsmallgear.jpg
With the bearing cap screws out and the nut and gear off the other end I was
now able to slide the head out of the machine. There was some liberal BFH
usage against a block of wood against the end of the shaft to get it
started.
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14headcomingout.jpg
I pressed new bearings onto the shaft with a 20 ton hydraulic floor press
and installed the head the same way it came out.
Then came the problem that held me up for 45 minutes. I could not get the
woodruff key out of the old head. Most people are familiar with a key and
keyway on the end of a shaft for a pulley. A small piece of square bar stock
engages in a keyway (groove) in both the pulley and the shaft to stop it
from free spinning. I usually tap a woodruff key (small semi circle piece of
metal) with small hammer to remove it. I hit this key so hard I was worried
I was peening it, it would not budge. I ground a cold chisel to a sharp
point and drove it into the end of the key and ended up prying it out. I
had to file down all the marks I had made in the key and tried to fit it
into the new head. Nope wouldn't fit. I spent 10 minutes looking around the
shop trying to find another one. I found two, one was too thin and the other
was the same size and would not fit either. I spent quite a while filing the
key until it finally fit into the shaft,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14woodruff.JPG
With the key in place, I could the worm gear back in and reinstall the big
bolt that holds everything in,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14boltingheadin.jpg
Install new gasket and reassemble gear box.
Time for an oil change,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14oilfill.jpg
Put oil fill and sight plugs back in, reinstall dust hood and button
everything up.
Time to fire it up,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14planing.jpg
Cool.
Take a look at the curly maple board,
http://www.federatedtool.com/david/img/14board.jpg
Not one bit of tear out. Nice upgrade.
I ran out of time today to do the final modification, that will have to wait
until Monday.
Thanks for looking,
David.
Every Neighbourhood has one, in Mine I'm Him.
> So what was the elapsed time to change out the cutter head
> and be up and running? Any alignment problems?
No problems other than those mentioned. It just took a couple of hours, but
working at a tool store, I had everything around me I could possibly need.
> These new cutter heads seem like the answer to a prayer
> when it comes to planing highly figured wood. The sample
> board you show was a great test - high figure AND knots -
> both "challenging" for conventional straight knife knives.
I cannot wait to take it home (raining for the last few days) and try it on
some of the squirly ash I have.
Thanks,
David.
So what was the elapsed time to change out the cutter head
and be up and running? Any alignment problems?
These new cutter heads seem like the answer to a prayer
when it comes to planing highly figured wood. The sample
board you show was a great test - high figure AND knots -
both "challenging" for conventional straight knife knives.
Thanks for the How To and congrats on the Neener.
charlie b
"David F. Eisan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hello everyone,
>
> I have had this sitting around work for a month or so,
Very nice David, good job.
David F. Eisan wrote:
> Hello everyone,
>snip
Not one bit of tear out. Nice upgrade.
>
> I ran out of time today to do the final modification, that will have to wait
> until Monday.
>
> Thanks for looking,
>
> David.
>
> Every Neighbourhood has one, in Mine I'm Him.
>
>
Very Nice, but what's the final modification/ It's Monday here:-)
Joe