As I am restoring this old ShopSmith greenie I notice there is no bottom saw blade guard.
I’m thinking this could be very dangerous if you accidently reached under the table.
What I would like to know is did the 1954 green ShopSmith come with a lower saw blade guard, if so does anyone know where I can order one in Ontario, Canada.
Thank you
Dave Dufour
Lower saw blade guard
Moderator: admin
The upper and lower blade guards were optional accessories for the greenies as far as I can determine. I have an old SS catalog and it shows dad leaning over his SS...no guards in sight. You can occasionally find the old guards on Ebay, but you probably don't want them since they were aluminum and could reek havoc on a carbide-tipped blade. The newer guards are plasticdsdufour wrote:As I am restoring this old ShopSmith greenie I notice there is no bottom saw blade guard.
I’m thinking this could be very dangerous if you accidently reached under the table.
What I would like to know is did the 1954 green ShopSmith come with a lower saw blade guard, if so does anyone know where I can order one in Ontario, Canada.
Thank you
Dave Dufour
My greenie came with no guards, so I have the SS saw guard upgrade kit on order (backorder, actually since Dec.). It's fairly pricey (>$100), but I figure it is worth it for safety and its dust collection capability. Of course you can just upgrade to the 510/520, but that upgrade costs more than the price of the greenie, and you'd probably want the newer headstock (more HP, poly-V belt, dual bearing quill) to go with it.
John Mallick
Dripping Springs, TX
Beginning Woodworker
Passable Barbecue'er
Dripping Springs, TX
Beginning Woodworker
Passable Barbecue'er
Don't' give a worry about aluminum reeking havoc on a carbide blade. Occasionally I use mine to cut aluminum angle braces. This practice has even been recommended in wood working magazines.
In fact, I once was using my SS as a saw horse and sawed a small kerf in my extension table.
This was using my little skill saw.
That little 1" kerf is there as a reminder not to again use the Mark V as a saw horse.
In fact, I once was using my SS as a saw horse and sawed a small kerf in my extension table.


Octogenarian's have an earned right to be a curmudgeon.
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
Chuck in Lancaster, CA
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