- Joined
- Oct 30, 2019
- Messages
- 225
Last summer I towed home a Rockwell 28-3x5 20" bandsaw, a ~950 lbs beast with some features that led me to replace my Enco 360 with it:
- 20" capacity whereas the Enco was 14"
- The enco topped out around 150SFPM, whereas the new one can go from ~50 to 4500 FPM
- These have obvious benefits all-around, one of them being that this could allow for occasional resawing of wood for other projects, though I didn't really think about that until after it was home
A number of things on this need some TLC:
- The air blower nozzle is broken off and gone
- The air blower has no belt, it probably broke or was left off during some other change/repair
- The speed control pedal/cable setup was all screwed up, along with the speed indicator needle (now all fixed)
- The upper blade guide had a bearing that would overheat at high speeds
- The upper blade guide.... wobbles? It isn't rigid like you would expect a blade guide to be
- Some issues with the blade tensioning that have since been fixed
- At some point I would like to track down a blade welder for this, it was optional but not installed -- my last bandsaw had a welder and I have a bunch of stock, if someone has a spare welder let me know the dimensions...
This post is about the blade guide wobble issue.
I tore down the upper (movable) blade guide to take the bearing out and see if it needed to be replaced or just cleaned/re-oiled. While I had that out, I realized just now non-rigid the upper guide was.
The clamp to lock the vertical position was doing its job, but what I realized was that the housing that the guide slides in, itself, was moving relative to the frame.
I started to piece this together - something was missing from a threaded hole below the lock handle
The smaller hole in the back seemed to be in the housing for the slide mechanism, because when I wiggled the upper guide arm I could see that piece moving relative to the larger thread.
I could not find good pictures of what was supposed to be here, but figured it should be similar to tracking adjustments I've seen on other saws such as the Enco -- a threaded hub (? not sure the exact name of this kind of part) goes into the big hole, and a smaller bolt passes through that into the thing in the back (for wheel tracking it would be the plate that the spindle mounts onto; in this case it's the outside housing of the guide's slide)
I measured the inner hole to be 3/8-16 UNC, and the outside of the hub would be 3/4 UNF. I do have a 3/4 UNF die in my set of adjustable GTD Little Giant dies, though it was out of adjustment and I didn't have a reference to set it up with; also the set screws in that die were all messed up . After I got that fixed and adjusted, I set to work making this hub out of brass since I had some 3/4 stock sitting around.
First I threaded it with the die, then chucked it up in the Chipmaster
Drilled a 3/16 through hole, knurled where I was going to part it (the bridgeport is out of tram so I didn't want to mill flats or a hex on it right now). Broke some edges, chamfered it....
I picked out a bolt the right length to clamp tight without going through the slide housing and interfering with the slide, threw a copper washer from the junk shelf onto it, a bit of grease on sliding surfaces
And now the upper guide assembly's slide is rock solid and plumb.
Quick and dirty, only ~30 minutes of work after fixing the 3/4 UNF die. The knurls were particularly terrible because I don't have any decent knurling tooling nor practice at it.
This will probably resolve quality/consistency issues we had with resawing a wood project on here, for next time. I don't feel like putting the monster (to us) 1" - 2 TPI blade back on there just to test right now. This lives in the metal shop, and I don't care for the sawdust back there except when we're ready to do a batch of resawing for different projects at the same time
Thanks for reading
- 20" capacity whereas the Enco was 14"
- The enco topped out around 150SFPM, whereas the new one can go from ~50 to 4500 FPM
- These have obvious benefits all-around, one of them being that this could allow for occasional resawing of wood for other projects, though I didn't really think about that until after it was home
A number of things on this need some TLC:
- The air blower nozzle is broken off and gone
- The air blower has no belt, it probably broke or was left off during some other change/repair
- The speed control pedal/cable setup was all screwed up, along with the speed indicator needle (now all fixed)
- The upper blade guide had a bearing that would overheat at high speeds
- The upper blade guide.... wobbles? It isn't rigid like you would expect a blade guide to be
- Some issues with the blade tensioning that have since been fixed
- At some point I would like to track down a blade welder for this, it was optional but not installed -- my last bandsaw had a welder and I have a bunch of stock, if someone has a spare welder let me know the dimensions...
This post is about the blade guide wobble issue.
I tore down the upper (movable) blade guide to take the bearing out and see if it needed to be replaced or just cleaned/re-oiled. While I had that out, I realized just now non-rigid the upper guide was.
The clamp to lock the vertical position was doing its job, but what I realized was that the housing that the guide slides in, itself, was moving relative to the frame.
I started to piece this together - something was missing from a threaded hole below the lock handle
The smaller hole in the back seemed to be in the housing for the slide mechanism, because when I wiggled the upper guide arm I could see that piece moving relative to the larger thread.
I could not find good pictures of what was supposed to be here, but figured it should be similar to tracking adjustments I've seen on other saws such as the Enco -- a threaded hub (? not sure the exact name of this kind of part) goes into the big hole, and a smaller bolt passes through that into the thing in the back (for wheel tracking it would be the plate that the spindle mounts onto; in this case it's the outside housing of the guide's slide)
I measured the inner hole to be 3/8-16 UNC, and the outside of the hub would be 3/4 UNF. I do have a 3/4 UNF die in my set of adjustable GTD Little Giant dies, though it was out of adjustment and I didn't have a reference to set it up with; also the set screws in that die were all messed up . After I got that fixed and adjusted, I set to work making this hub out of brass since I had some 3/4 stock sitting around.
First I threaded it with the die, then chucked it up in the Chipmaster
Drilled a 3/16 through hole, knurled where I was going to part it (the bridgeport is out of tram so I didn't want to mill flats or a hex on it right now). Broke some edges, chamfered it....
I picked out a bolt the right length to clamp tight without going through the slide housing and interfering with the slide, threw a copper washer from the junk shelf onto it, a bit of grease on sliding surfaces
And now the upper guide assembly's slide is rock solid and plumb.
Quick and dirty, only ~30 minutes of work after fixing the 3/4 UNF die. The knurls were particularly terrible because I don't have any decent knurling tooling nor practice at it.
This will probably resolve quality/consistency issues we had with resawing a wood project on here, for next time. I don't feel like putting the monster (to us) 1" - 2 TPI blade back on there just to test right now. This lives in the metal shop, and I don't care for the sawdust back there except when we're ready to do a batch of resawing for different projects at the same time
Thanks for reading