Juggling Table Saws
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- Опубліковано 9 чер 2024
- In the middle of the shop, I have three table saws that are connected into one large table. Two of the saws are a Powermatic 72 and a Powermatic 66. These two saws I use all the time. They face each other; each is the outfeed table for the other saw. Next to these two saws, I have an Oliver 88 which I haven't used as much. In this project, I fixed the wobbly arbor on the Oliver 88, so the blade now runs straight and true. I also moved the Oliver 88 to become the side table for the Powermatic 66. This allowed me to use the fence from the 66 on both the 66 and the Oliver 88 giving the Oliver a fence and making the saw much more useful. I also adjusted the Powermatic 72 slightly so it is slightly further away from the Powermatic 66. I adjusted the fence on the 72 so I have more space to the left of the blade which I found to be more useful. Also, the emergency stop button on the 72 is a little more accessible. The entire setup got slightly narrower and a little bit longer, but I'm finding it very useful.
Rip-it: rip-itfence.com/
Tools used in this project can be found at www.frankmakes.com/
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0:00 (introduction)
1:20 (fixing)
4:17 (moving 88-D)
9:40 (moving 66)
14:18 (moving 72)
18:28 (all together)
22:10 (conclusion) - Навчання та стиль
I love that Frank just says "Matthias" and we all know who he's talking about.
is that that dude in canada with ugly baby? i think i watched him years ago.if it's the one...
Totally agree. I instantly remembered the video 😂
The OG UA-cam woodworkers.
@@filmer197 ugly baby?
Who is he talking about ?
You do have to spend some time setting the saw up... blade, fence, etc. But once done, the saw is great. Fairly compact which is Nice ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxXh-4_3-ZT1fFWP91ZV7iVqzElr0lEb-a I did get an Incra Miter Gauge which takes some setup as well. The stock miter gauge can be adjusted in the miter slot with a little painter's tape... this tightens up the side to side play a lot.
You're so sensible and methodical Frank ,a pleasure to watch .
Three table saws. Two Franks. Two videos in one. I think that equals a great woodworker/UA-camr!❤
I have always liked Frank's giant table of table saws in the center of the workshop, looks awesome and must be nice to have so many options :)
We are tiny, reflects the heart every vision and each piece is unwilling.
There aren't many cabinet shops that have 4 table saws, let alone home woodshops. That is quite the setup you have there. Many options for dedicated setups.
Three integrated table saws, novel. I really enjoyed seeing the old Dewalt cut-off saw. It's been around a long time and was the workhouse in our shop back in the late 50's-60's. Yep---I'm an 'ol-timer
I look forward to the day when you finally complete the setup by getting a fourth table saw and replacing the last remaining plywood extension table!
I believe the grinding stone strategy works best when you: 1) make contact between the stone and the arbor flange, and then 2) raise and lower the arbor flange with the handwheel. This ensures that you aren't just grinding in the rough profile of your stone into your flange. The raising and lowering of the flange is what makes that interface nice and flat. But glad you got something to work out anyways!
I think that Oliver is nearly the size of the Tannewitz we have. I suspect it’s a little newer, but just as robust. Love the video, and all your maneuverings with the crane!
The disappearing 1/8" had me dying.
Yeah, very relatable for me.
I came across that exact saw when I ran a shop in Kansas City back in the 80's. It was complete, fence, two miter gauges with the bracket that tied them together, the extension table, and even the manual. Built like a milling machine. Oliver was still in business in Grand Rapids at the time. I got the spec sheets from them. It could handle an 18" blade and a 4" wide dado head! I shudder to even think about that. Good to see another one!
I have to always remember to put on a bib to catch my drool when I see Franks workshop !!
Dedicated rip and cross cut saws, what a luxury.
"Don't have to be perfect" famous words coming from a man who's eye for detail is fantastic! :)
The trick is knowing where to put the imperfection.
Best shop on UA-cam.
This was so fun to watch. Knowing the previous system pretty well from your videos, it was enjoyable to see how the new arrangement fit together. Or how you made it fit together. Just awesome.
Best wishes from Poland,👋
Frank, you should do audio books. Your voice is the butter on the biscuit. Good stuff.
Wow, thanks!
Hey Frank, I enjoy your videos and thought I would drop you a note regarding table saws and on/off switches. On my table saw I installed a push button switch (momentary) that was easy to find on the front of the saw that pulled in a relay to actually start the saw. A second contact on the relay held it energized. To stop the saw I put a kick plate just above the floor that was attached to the front of the saw. A normally closed switch was attached behind the kick plate, so that when the kick plate was kicked, the switch opened and dropped out the motor relay. No need to try to find the on/off switch, just kick the kick plate. I kept the regular start/stop push button for a safety shut off when the saw was not in use. Just a thought, again, always enjoy your videos.
Yes, I was thinking of making a wood piece to go over the switch with a hole in it. I could push the on button through the hole and I can hit a entire wood piece with my knee or foot to turn it off.
Well done! During the whole video I was thinking: "What a strange name for a tablesaw : Paramedic. But at the end I could read the correct name Powermatic. ;-) I find it always such a relief watching your videos! Like John Cleese used to say : "And Now Something Totally Different! ". Thank you for sharing.
With the advent of the Saw Stop table saw ,paramedic might be a great name.😊
I’m glad I’m not the only one playing games with disappearing/reappearing 1/8” height differences on heavy equipment
You can make something like levers or biger red and black buttons to switch off and on Oliver table saw. Now this don't looks safe.
Great workshop and video.
I have a 1955 DeWalt that looks very much like yours. Had the motor apart for cleaning. Takes forever to slow down after cutting power - adding a circuit to help with that. Good video - thanks for posting.
A scene shop I used to work at had an Oliver 270 from the mid 60's and what a pleasure it was to use. The cast base just soaked up vibrations.
Wow can I SO relate. 1/8" too low. Oops now 1/8" too high somehow. Aaand 1/8" too low again. AAAAA!
So nice to see the two Franks work peacefully together, maybee third Frank behind camera today...?! Very nice job, Franks..! 🤗
Must be a huge help having yourself around the shop, I knew it was just a matter of time before Frank figured out how to clone himself.
Oh, wow! The project screen is back! And TWO Franks! I love these vids. So much fun to watch.
I just love how you can see the editing getting better and better every video. Keep at it, Frank! Much love
Thanks you for your teaching videos!
I love these videos with both Frank and Hank Howarth!
Hi Alan 👋
I was thinking of watching a murder mystery on tv, but I couldn't tear myself away from this with all the special effects. 😮
Outstanding sir, outstanding!
facinating!
I like your angle cutting mitre box for the sawsall trick. We tune in because you’re a leader not a follower. Cheers
This reminded me of Dwight from the Office making his megadesk. 'Getting more megasaw'.
So nice sir
Neat project. Your new setup is definitely improved.
You did a fine job with that arbor. 👍
This guy reminds me on a sloth in every way. The way he talks, moves like everything.I mean no dissrespect to him he is an excelent creator that is why i watch his videos but everytime i see his video the sloth comes on my mind.
Pretty nice work, Frank! The shop is looking much better now! 😊
Stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
Just yesterday, I checked to see if Frank posted a new video in case I missed a notification. 😀👍
This tuto is very well sir
Worked out great, Frank. Getting the best shop layout is one of the hardest things and never ending.
Bill
as always, thanks for taking us on your journey, Frank(s)!
You are so amazing
In some ways, I’m glad to see that I came up with the same solution a few years ago with the arbor. I chucked up a grinding stone in my router and it helped take out the high spots (dents and impacts) fairly well. But I didn’t come up with such a thorough jig that you made. My Powermatic is also from the 60’s and it’s seen a bit of work. For me, the real fix turned out to be the coulet under the nut securing the blade to the arbor. It was smaller diameter than the one that I’d machined with the grinding wheel and in effect, it was bowing the blade when tightened down. Once I’d had a part machined that matched the arbor, the blade was straight and true. Love your videos because I enjoy seeing how a real pro engineers things.
Great video!
Your shop is so lovely. It makes all your videos so pleasant to watch
I'm having trouble setting up one cabinet saw in my shop. I cannot imagine trying to set up three.🙂🙂
That Oliver saw is a beast. It absolutely dwarfs the Powermatic 66. Nice compact setup with the three saws now. Thanks for sharing!
I thoroughly enjoyed watching your thought-process and ingenuity. I have used the "raise one side of the saw (jointer, planer, etc.)" and attempt to kick a pad under the base, hoping for the best. One day when it wasn't working out too well, after a 3rd cup of coffee, I turned 2 parallel clamps heads around to make parallel spreaders. With a 1300 pound clamping spec, I figured they should be strong enough to lift one side of the saw. It worked great. With 2 "spreaders", one near each corner, they easily lifted the saw. Also, it was easy to fine tune the height. Good luck, stay safe. Thx.
Ahh the joys of working alone. 😂😂
These little things that would take one fifth the time with one other person.
Beautiful works of art, as always
I never get tired of that squeaky clamp mozying across the screen in the outro I dearly hope it does not have a run-in with some WD-40 and loose it's squeeky charm.
I was expecting to hear that you checked the planer and found the cut depth needed recalibration after the recent head change, but how banal! Glad to see a nice solid old machine back in active service.
Always loved the quality of your videos.
It's very satisfying to reorganise to better suit needs! Great video too, enjoyed it hugely thank you... your twin's looking well ;)
Thank you! 😊
Very informative video of your project. Such an impressive shop and yet you always seem to find something that makes it even better.
Excellent travail ! bravo !
Great to have a helper sometimes!
Another awesome video!! Thank you!!
What a great setup. Nice work as always Frank.
LinkHart 👋
Hi Frank herzlichen Glückwunsch zu deiner neuen säge. Ich glaube es ist an der Zeit das du dir eine neue Werkstatt bauen solltest, ehrlich" deine Werkstatt ist zu klein" seit 8 Jahren verfolge ich deinen Kanal, du bist der beste. Liebe Grüße aus Deutschland
Good job!
Looks good brother..
Definitely need an in depth video about the Rip-it
Belle ingéniosité bravo 😊
Hi, Frank.. I always seeing you fighting with your radial arm saw... Here is one suggestion. Make the pully from the counterweight rope bigger.. The bigger, the better. This is a lesson which i learned on my Homemade panel saw build. Greets from Germany.
He's not struggling, at least, not in the way you think. And he has the counterweight you describe. I recall Frank commenting in another video that he didn't bother with installing negative-rake blades on his radial arm saws (look it up). Without that, and by using a saw blade built for a conventional table saw (positive rake) you are fighting the radial arm saw's natural inclination to grab and accelerate through the wood--very unsafe. Essentially, the difference between have the saw above the workpiece (radial arm saw) and below the workpiece (table saw).
So Frank compensates by pushing the saw as it pulls through the cut, resulting in that awkward cutting behavior. I had to do the same thing until I switched to negative-rake blades on my radial arm saw. They are expensive and can't be used on a table saw, so many radial arm saw owners don't bother.
Love your editing skills
Very cool.
Any clown can juggle chainsaws, but juggling table saws is some cirque-saw du soleil level shit.
All this work. Must be a big project coming up. Hopefully !!!!
great video , you probably already know bends ,elbows and flex pipe put a drag on the dust collection system, in other words a loss of suction .I notice behind the table saws in the end of the video. I have an Oneida system very good.
3 Legendary saws. I recently was able to add a 1983 Unisaw into the shop as a complement to my SawStop. I have actually being using the Unisaw more frequently. Go figure.
Yeah I know how that goes. I got the 66 new and it was nice. Then a few years later I got the old used 72 and I find I use that more than the 66.
Three table saws is every woodworkers dream. Great video,fun to watch (as usual). Thank you Frank!
Frank, its ok to say it. We all know this move was to be able to play with the new fancy electronic fence xD
Love the video’s. I could not remember if that was a saw you made a video picking it up years ago. Gives me something to watch while recovering from spine fusion
I don't think I've ever made a video about that saw. I made one about picking up my planer.
If you raise whatever your lifting above the legs of the crane or engine hoist or whatever, you can the place some beams across the legs and lower the item onto the beams. That way your crane becomes a trolley, the item can't drop and doesn't swing around as you're moving. Once you get close, lift, take the beams out and off you go. Much easier and safer that way...
I hadn't thought about that. Basically making the crane into a cart. I like it
@@frankmakes otherwise you're just swinging a pendulum. That hasn't been a thing since the Renaissance 😄
Amazing!
Duuuuuuude, your masking and compositing game just took a big leap forward. with that intro. I'm an editor and VFX artist, and I think it looked great!
Thanks Frank. I recently built my tomato cages from your videos. And I plan on putting some sauce away this year. 👍
Fantastic! A few of the ones I built have come apart but most of them are still working great.
Good to see your identical twin brother helping out. Trouble Is, it's hard to discern who is who of the two...
Frank, maybe some modifications can be made to your 'crane'. Would make a good video. If you make a swing arm for the hoist so you can manipulate loads inside it support footprint, you'll get more utility out of it.
Arbor flange is the term you're looking for.
Yes!
How many table saws do you need?
Frank: Yes!
Joking aside, awesome video! I'm especially in love with the crane!
That hole was threaded!
8:56 I appreciate this shot
Frank, I’m sure it so nice to have your tablesaw, excuse me two tablesaws, oh sorry three tablesaws, (phewww) working in perfect harmony with each other. You might just sit up on top of them in the center for your zen meditation ….haha>
You now need remote controlled blast gates so the dust collection is directed as needed. I saw manual blast gates but those must be quite a pain to reach.
11:05 From personal experience, I like to call that Schrodinger's tape measure. Whether the piece was cut to the correct or incorrect length is only determined after I've cut it.
When I was in the Navy working with millwrights, they only shimmed with metal. It was non-compressible and performed better than wood or plastic or other softer materials.
Amazing those saws dont have leveling feet in the corners? Thanks for sharing. Charles
To grind my arbor flange I did the same thing except I used a lollipop type ball stone in the router.
With the router and saw running and arbor perpendicual with the table top crank the blade down
just bellow the flange and bump the router over to just barely touch the stone to the grinder.
Now with both router and saw running slowly crank the blade arbor up and down then bump the
router over just a little bit at time and keep cranking the arbor up and down until there are no more sparks.
After several passes the arbor will run true.
Note: make sure the arbor bearings are good before doing this or results will be bad.
Is the Arbor the Plainer?
@@ericpohlman5131 The Arbor works with the Plainer to defeat the Jointer in the battle with the Lathe Master, unless the Plainer uses Magic to fool him into ...
Howling at the disappearing and reappearing 1/8”!
You need to find you a local buddy with a machine shop who also needs some wood working done. Then you can exchange some work whenever that nasty metal stuff comes up, and he can get help with his carbohydrate foam.
Drat! Add 1/8" then take it off, then add it again. .. Patience as always from Frank.
Birdy
Nice work! You should look into a Burke bar, you’d be able to walk that saw right over with one and then easily change out your shims without hurting yourself.
That would be handy, but $200+ ain't cheap. But you'd likely find plenty of uses for it.
thanks