Planer with power station?

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saminmn
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Location: Northfield, MN

Planer with power station?

Post by saminmn »

I am thinking of getting a joiner mounted on a power station. I was looking as SS web site and noted that thicknesser is not a power station option. I had been attracted to the add because it had a power station and an earlier thread had indicated the planer was heavy to be moving around so I had thought a semi permanent home would be good if I ever got a planer. So my question is is there a real incompatibility? Or is it just a slower operation with the lower hp and rpm?
Sam in Northfield, MN
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Mark V 500 - S/N 100990, Mark V 510 - S/N missing, SS Band Saw, SS 6" Belt Sander, SS 4" Jointer, SS Scroll Saw, SS DC3300
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dusty
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Post by dusty »

saminmn wrote:I am thinking of getting a joiner mounted on a power station. I was looking as SS web site and noted that thicknesser is not a power station option. I had been attracted to the add because it had a power station and an earlier thread had indicated the planer was heavy to be moving around so I had thought a semi permanent home would be good if I ever got a planer. So my question is is there a real incompatibility? Or is it just a slower operation with the lower hp and rpm?
I guess this is what threw me off track. I am not at all good when trying to read between the lines. I guess you can say I have a one track mind.

Yes the "surface planer" (aka thicknesser) is incompatible with the power station.
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Dusty
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trainguytom
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better solution

Post by trainguytom »

If you want to use the thickness planer as, more or less, a stand alone tool I'd suggest using a Shopsmith "shortie" instead of a power station. An older inexpensive SS with the tubes cut so it's just long enough to accommodate the thickness planer, and also useful for other add-on tools if you like.
My dad's 1951 10er, 2 more 10er's, same vintage, a Goldie MK5, a 510 shortie with 34inch tubes, bandsaw, jointer, jigsaw, belt sander, a ton of small SS goodies and still looking...you just can't have enough Shopsmith stuff
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stephen_a._draper
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Stand Alone Planer

Post by stephen_a._draper »

My Shopsmith planer was originally mounted on my Mark V 500 when I needed to do some planing. I later wanted it as a stand alone planer so I bought the Shopsmith stand and motor that is designed specifically for the planer. I immediately noticed the difference because the motor that is supplied is 1 3/4 HP. You can plug it into a regular 115 V outlet but I recommend you have a 20 A circuit to keep from tripping the circuit breaker on a 15 A circuit. The one supplied now is 1 1/2 HP and you will get a consistent 5750 RPM. You might want to order it now before the price increase next week. Here is the link:

http://www.shopsmith.com/ownersite/cata ... stands.htm
Shopsmith Mark 4, Mark 7, Mark 5 shorty, planer, bandsaw, jointer, belt sander. Grizzly central dust collection 4" PVC trunk. Shopsmith Routing System stand-alone overhead pin router.

Stephen A. Draper
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damagi
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Post by damagi »

saminmn wrote:I am thinking of getting a joiner mounted on a power station. I was looking as SS web site and noted that thicknesser is not a power station option. I had been attracted to the add because it had a power station and an earlier thread had indicated the planer was heavy to be moving around so I had thought a semi permanent home would be good if I ever got a planer. So my question is is there a real incompatibility? Or is it just a slower operation with the lower hp and rpm?
If you have a mark V mount planer already and need a stand/motor combo let me know.
Mark 7, Pro Planer, Jointer, Bandsaw w/Kreg, Biscuit Joiner, Belt Sander, Jig Saw, Ringmaster, DC3300, Overarm Pin Router, Incra Ultimate setup

JWBS-14 w/6" riser, RBI Hawk 226 Ultra, Bosch GSM12SD Axial Glide Dual Compound Miter Saw

-- I have parts/SPTs available, so if you are in the Seattle area and need something let me know --
damagi AT gmail DOT com
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