Sawdust Session #22
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- barbandrob
- Gold Member
- Posts: 25
- Joined: Mon May 26, 2008 3:31 pm
- Location: Washington, DC
Just watched the composite session and the re-build session. Holy cow, Nick, all those parts made my eyes bleed. I'm now officially terrified. I am determind to learn these machines inside and out, however, so I WILL get over it. The sessions were outstanding, as usual and I was impressed that the only "technical difficulty" I saw in the two I watched was the glitch with the silly hand drill. I think it had poltergeists.
Learning more and more every day,
Learning more and more every day,
Barb B.
Washington, DC
1989 Mark V 510/520 upgrade with ALL (and I do mean ALL) the fixin's!!
Washington, DC
1989 Mark V 510/520 upgrade with ALL (and I do mean ALL) the fixin's!!
- cowboyplus
- Gold Member
- Posts: 57
- Joined: Wed Apr 16, 2008 2:31 pm
- Location: Colorado
- barbandrob
- Gold Member
- Posts: 25
- Joined: Mon May 26, 2008 3:31 pm
- Location: Washington, DC
Hi Cowboy - I noticed that too. It's an old interlude from Session #21 about pneumatic drum sanding of cove molding. Just a little glitch there.cowboyplus wrote:Drew's second clip is a duplicate from session 21.
However, you CAN get to the actual interlude (flattening twisted drawers) by clicking on the "Flattening a Drawer" text box in the little picture with Super ShopSmith Dude.
Happy watching,
Barb B.
Washington, DC
1989 Mark V 510/520 upgrade with ALL (and I do mean ALL) the fixin's!!
Washington, DC
1989 Mark V 510/520 upgrade with ALL (and I do mean ALL) the fixin's!!
Barb,
I too am hesitant to tear down the ShopSmith, but I’m going to have too if I want to lube it properly. What I learned from the Sawdust Session was to have small containers to hold the parts of each phase of the disassembly. Laying them on a table would be a recipe for disaster in my garage/workshop!
Ron
I too am hesitant to tear down the ShopSmith, but I’m going to have too if I want to lube it properly. What I learned from the Sawdust Session was to have small containers to hold the parts of each phase of the disassembly. Laying them on a table would be a recipe for disaster in my garage/workshop!
Ron
Hey Ron,Ron309753 wrote:Barb,
What I learned from the Sawdust Session was to have small containers to hold the parts of each phase of the disassembly. Laying them on a table would be a recipe for disaster in my garage/workshop!
Ron
I like to use magnets for keeping up with small parts. I have several big magnets off the backs of old stereo speakers that I keep on my workbench. Anytime I take something apart, I just toss the screws, etc. onto the magnet and they stay put until reassembly. I also use a small but very strong magnet on the end of my SS to keep up with my chuck key for the SS Jacobs chuck. I can move the key around if I bump it, but I have to grab and pull to get it off and it's almost scary when I put it back on! A friend who worked in a paper mill gave me this magnet years ago and said it came off of a piece of machinery in the mill. It was so impressive that I carried it to work the next day to show the guys and when I walked by a filing cabinet it tore a hole in my pocket:)
Alan
'Baking The World A Better Place'
'Baking The World A Better Place'

- chiroindixon
- Gold Member
- Posts: 243
- Joined: Thu Jul 20, 2006 1:42 pm
- Location: QCA Iowa
Sounds like a rare earth magnet. I bought a sample set from Lee Valley/Veritas. They are awesome in strength. Like none others I have ever played with.
When I have time, I intend to make the jointer blade alignment jig that Doug Reid used to recommend.
I hadn't thought of putting one in a pan to hold screws, etc. Thanks.
Doc
When I have time, I intend to make the jointer blade alignment jig that Doug Reid used to recommend.
I hadn't thought of putting one in a pan to hold screws, etc. Thanks.
Doc