JJ

JGS

20/01/2005 4:18 PM

Problem with a Delta Planer

From another forum: I guy has a feed problem with his planer and takes
it to a repair depot and eventually posts the following which I thought
might be of interest for those who work in cold shops. ...............

"Delta called me today to say that they found no problems with the
planer. They had tested with a couple of boards and there was no
jerkiness whatsoever. So I asked if they ran hard maple thru in which
they said no. So i jumped in my car with a couple of maple boards and
went into the shop with them. He was right, no issues...it planed as
smooth as one would expect. I brought a couple of other boards to show
the pattern on the boards from my planing the night before and they
agreed it looked suspicious. We tried about 20 passes and everything was
perfect. I am very confused but can't argue with the results. Then an
older fellow came over and asked what the temp of the shop was, I was
in. I told him it was my garage and that at best I get it up to 50
degrees. He looked at the rollers and came to the conclusion that the
cold temp was hardening the rollers just enough that with the bit of
dirt I had, it was probably my issue. Recommended I go home, clean the
rollers with paint thinner, than hot soapy water and give it another
try. So I go home, put the planer in the garage, go back to work. Come
back 6 hrs later, get the heaters going, get the temp up to maybe 50 and
try planing some maple...sure enough, jerky, jerky, jerky. So, I clean
as per instructed and just for safety, rewax the tables.....planes like
a charm now!

Jeepers, i would have never thought the temp could effect things like
that.
Sorry for the length here but it was a valuable lesson for myself and
hopefully others. "



This topic has 6 replies

Tt

TDUP

in reply to JGS on 20/01/2005 4:18 PM

20/01/2005 6:48 PM

Thanks for the feedback. I have had a similar problem with my Delta
planer and now wonder if that isn't my problem also. I keep mine in the
basement where it doesn't get much over 60. Sometimes it works really
well and other times the chips seem to get all clogged up and it just
doesn't plane well.

Tim


JGS wrote:
> From another forum: I guy has a feed problem with his planer and takes
> it to a repair depot and eventually posts the following which I thought
> might be of interest for those who work in cold shops. ...............
>
> "Delta called me today to say that they found no problems with the
> planer. They had tested with a couple of boards and there was no
> jerkiness whatsoever. So I asked if they ran hard maple thru in which
> they said no. So i jumped in my car with a couple of maple boards and
> went into the shop with them. He was right, no issues...it planed as
> smooth as one would expect. I brought a couple of other boards to show
> the pattern on the boards from my planing the night before and they
> agreed it looked suspicious. We tried about 20 passes and everything was
> perfect. I am very confused but can't argue with the results. Then an
> older fellow came over and asked what the temp of the shop was, I was
> in. I told him it was my garage and that at best I get it up to 50
> degrees. He looked at the rollers and came to the conclusion that the
> cold temp was hardening the rollers just enough that with the bit of
> dirt I had, it was probably my issue. Recommended I go home, clean the
> rollers with paint thinner, than hot soapy water and give it another
> try. So I go home, put the planer in the garage, go back to work. Come
> back 6 hrs later, get the heaters going, get the temp up to maybe 50 and
> try planing some maple...sure enough, jerky, jerky, jerky. So, I clean
> as per instructed and just for safety, rewax the tables.....planes like
> a charm now!
>
> Jeepers, i would have never thought the temp could effect things like
> that.
> Sorry for the length here but it was a valuable lesson for myself and
> hopefully others. "
>
>
>

Gg

"George"

in reply to JGS on 20/01/2005 4:18 PM

20/01/2005 5:22 PM


"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Hmmm, I thought alcohol was the appropriate cleaner for the rollers; not
> a petroleum based solvent.
>

Non-polar solvent for resins.

Gg

"George"

in reply to JGS on 20/01/2005 4:18 PM

20/01/2005 5:57 PM

I've always found learning proper terminology invaluable in acquiring
information.

Solvents immiscible with water dissolve substances immiscible with water and
vice-versa.

Which means, like, oil and water don't mix, y'know.

"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> You like that term (polar), don't you, George?
>
> David
>
> George wrote:
>
> > "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]...
> >
> >>Hmmm, I thought alcohol was the appropriate cleaner for the rollers; not
> >>a petroleum based solvent.
> >>
> >
> >
> > Non-polar solvent for resins.
> >
> >

DD

David

in reply to JGS on 20/01/2005 4:18 PM

20/01/2005 2:08 PM

Hmmm, I thought alcohol was the appropriate cleaner for the rollers; not
a petroleum based solvent.

David

JGS wrote:
> From another forum: I guy has a feed problem with his planer and takes
> it to a repair depot and eventually posts the following which I thought
> might be of interest for those who work in cold shops. ...............
>
> "Delta called me today to say that they found no problems with the
> planer. They had tested with a couple of boards and there was no
> jerkiness whatsoever. So I asked if they ran hard maple thru in which
> they said no. So i jumped in my car with a couple of maple boards and
> went into the shop with them. He was right, no issues...it planed as
> smooth as one would expect. I brought a couple of other boards to show
> the pattern on the boards from my planing the night before and they
> agreed it looked suspicious. We tried about 20 passes and everything was
> perfect. I am very confused but can't argue with the results. Then an
> older fellow came over and asked what the temp of the shop was, I was
> in. I told him it was my garage and that at best I get it up to 50
> degrees. He looked at the rollers and came to the conclusion that the
> cold temp was hardening the rollers just enough that with the bit of
> dirt I had, it was probably my issue. Recommended I go home, clean the
> rollers with paint thinner, than hot soapy water and give it another
> try. So I go home, put the planer in the garage, go back to work. Come
> back 6 hrs later, get the heaters going, get the temp up to maybe 50 and
> try planing some maple...sure enough, jerky, jerky, jerky. So, I clean
> as per instructed and just for safety, rewax the tables.....planes like
> a charm now!
>
> Jeepers, i would have never thought the temp could effect things like
> that.
> Sorry for the length here but it was a valuable lesson for myself and
> hopefully others. "
>
>
>

DD

David

in reply to JGS on 20/01/2005 4:18 PM

20/01/2005 2:34 PM

You like that term (polar), don't you, George?

David

George wrote:

> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>Hmmm, I thought alcohol was the appropriate cleaner for the rollers; not
>>a petroleum based solvent.
>>
>
>
> Non-polar solvent for resins.
>
>

DD

David

in reply to JGS on 20/01/2005 4:18 PM

20/01/2005 4:06 PM

Yup. Delta's official method of cleaning the rollers is soap and water
applied with a Scotchbrite pad.

David

George wrote:

> I've always found learning proper terminology invaluable in acquiring
> information.
>
> Solvents immiscible with water dissolve substances immiscible with water and
> vice-versa.
>
> Which means, like, oil and water don't mix, y'know.
>
> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>You like that term (polar), don't you, George?
>>
>>David
>>
>>George wrote:
>>
>>
>>>"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>>news:[email protected]...
>>>
>>>
>>>>Hmmm, I thought alcohol was the appropriate cleaner for the rollers; not
>>>>a petroleum based solvent.
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>Non-polar solvent for resins.
>>>
>>>
>
>
>


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