Oiling sheeves

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whitehat1994
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Oiling sheeves

Post by whitehat1994 »

Greetings,

I oiled my Mark V 510 a couple of weeks ago. I was not able to see the oil hole in the lower sheeve shaft. I used a screw driver to widen the spring and turned the shaft and never saw the hole. I went ahead a dropped a few drop of 3-1 oil on the spring.

The speed dial is still maybe a little tough to turn. I'm not sure how easily the speed dial should turn.
Feedback appreciated!

Thank you

Richard
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tomsalwasser
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by tomsalwasser »

whitehat1994 wrote:I used a screw driver to widen the spring and turned the shaft and never saw the hole. I went ahead a dropped a few drop of 3-1 oil on the spring.
Hi Richard. I believe you have to run your headstock up to high speed and shut it off. Then when you spread the spring you will see the oil hole.
whitehat1994
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by whitehat1994 »

Ahhhhh....thank you. I do believe I remember reading that somewhere! LOL
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tomsalwasser
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by tomsalwasser »

You're welcome. Here's a link to some instructions: http://www.shopsmith.com/ownersite/prod ... e_1_10.pdf
whitehat1994
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by whitehat1994 »

Thank you again sir
charlese
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by charlese »

It is often not enough to just put a few drops of oil into the hole beneath the spring.

One of the most overlooked lubrication is oiling of the motor sheave shaft . It is not enough to oil only through the hole that is hiding in the spring. It is a better thing to put the Shopsmith into the drill press position, run the speed up to high and and flood oil the shaft. Let the oil soak/seep between the shaft and sleeve. Then lower to saw position and by hand, slide the outer sheave out several times until you feel it sliding more easily. Do this sliding smoothly! Don't let the sheave bang back into the motor sheave.

This spring loaded sheave is often the major cause of hard turning toward lower speeds. This is especially true after long periods of non lubrication.

Wipe off the excess oil - lower the machine from vertical and try the full movement of the speed control. This should help your situation so you can more easily lower speed.

I might also mention that failure to properly lubricate the motor sheaves puts excessive strain on the pork chop and associated speed control parts. Proper lubrication is really more important than the type of oil used.
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JPG
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by JPG »

AMEN!!!!
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╟JPG ╢
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Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10
E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
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everettdavis
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by everettdavis »

Sometimes I wonder about what pops into my mind when I am working on something.

One day I recall disassembling a headstock and as I was carrying parts in for cleaning and inspection, the lyrics just came..... Bringing in the Sheaves.... Bringing in the Sheaves; Guess I'll be re-oiling.....

You had to be there I guess, for that to make any sense at all....

Everett
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rpd
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Re: Oiling sheeves

Post by rpd »

everettdavis wrote:Sometimes I wonder about what pops into my mind when I am working on something.

One day I recall disassembling a headstock and as I was carrying parts in for cleaning and inspection, the lyrics just came..... Bringing in the Sheaves.... Bringing in the Sheaves; Guess I'll be re-oiling.....

You had to be there I guess, for that to make any sense at all....

Everett
Makes perfect sense to me. :D That song came to mind just reading the subject heading. ;)
Ron Dyck
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