TB

Tom Banes

21/04/2005 8:36 PM

QX - TS Mobile Base

TAP's JTAS 10 XL came with a nice HTC mobile stand (Model HRS10G).
It's a 3 point stand, 2 casters under the saw, one at the end of the
extension table. My problem is that the casters under the saw don't
swivel, so getting it up against the back wall of the garage is a bit
like parallel parking an 18 wheeler.

I'm considering slapping some swiveling casters under the base that is
under the saw so it will roll sideways, not just fore and aft. Has
anybody tried this and if so, how?

If I could replace the 2.5" non-swivel casters with some ball casters
that would support the 400+ pound of the saw and extension tables,
that would also make life easier. Anyone know of a source for real HD
ball casters?

Regards.

Tom


This topic has 3 replies

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to Tom Banes on 21/04/2005 8:36 PM

22/04/2005 3:36 AM


"Tom Banes" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> TAP's JTAS 10 XL came with a nice HTC mobile stand (Model HRS10G).
> It's a 3 point stand, 2 casters under the saw, one at the end of the
> extension table. My problem is that the casters under the saw don't
> swivel, so getting it up against the back wall of the garage is a bit
> like parallel parking an 18 wheeler.

I have the same set up and can get the saw to within an inch or two of a
wall. I would not advise using swivel casters on the saw end as this will
make the saw unstable when cutting. There is a reason for those 2 wheels
being set up the way that they are.


Pg

Patriarch

in reply to Tom Banes on 21/04/2005 8:36 PM

22/04/2005 9:31 AM

Tom Banes <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:

> On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 03:36:09 GMT, "Leon"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>I have the same set up and can get the saw to within an inch or two of
>>a wall. I would not advise using swivel casters on the saw end as
>>this will make the saw unstable when cutting. There is a reason for
>>those 2 wheels being set up the way that they are.
>>
> Thanks Leon. Sounds like you've learned to park that 18 wheeler!
>
> I was planning on using swiveling casters that can be locked or
> rigging a kick-up to raise the casters completely off the floor before
> sawing. Adding a similar kick-up at the "front" (extension table end)
> would keep the whole thing relatively level.
>
> It may be that with daily practice I'll get the parking drill down and
> not need swivels at all - we'll see.
>

Delta's mobile base, at least for the Aircraft Carrier version I own, uses
one lever-lift wheel, and two of the non-swivel type. It's easier to park
than an extended cab pickup at Safeway. With the lever up, I can't slide
that saw on a slick driveway floor. Which is the way it should be. Random
or unplanned movement in a saw is a bad thing.

Check out that design for inspiration. It's simple, and has been widely
used.

Patriarch

TB

Tom Banes

in reply to Tom Banes on 21/04/2005 8:36 PM

22/04/2005 8:01 AM

On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 03:36:09 GMT, "Leon"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>I have the same set up and can get the saw to within an inch or two of a
>wall. I would not advise using swivel casters on the saw end as this will
>make the saw unstable when cutting. There is a reason for those 2 wheels
>being set up the way that they are.
>
Thanks Leon. Sounds like you've learned to park that 18 wheeler!

I was planning on using swiveling casters that can be locked or
rigging a kick-up to raise the casters completely off the floor before
sawing. Adding a similar kick-up at the "front" (extension table end)
would keep the whole thing relatively level.

It may be that with daily practice I'll get the parking drill down and
not need swivels at all - we'll see.

Regards.

Tom


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