
But I do appreciate your advice and you can bet I'll be leaning on it heavily over the coming years.
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Probably! Make note of the 'pins' (adjustable)that help hold the workpiece and the three marks that indicate the amount of penetration for the three sizes of biscuits. Make sure the cutter does not scrape anything after mounting it on the quill.fiatben wrote:I am still looking for a manual for the biscuit jointer. Does anyone have a PDF of this? Or should it be intuitive enough for someone like me to just hook it up and go?
Are the pins you refer to the ones of which I have one missing?JPG40504 wrote:Probably! Make note of the 'pins' (adjustable)that help hold the workpiece and the three marks that indicate the amount of penetration for the three sizes of biscuits. Make sure the cutter does not scrape anything after mounting it on the quill.
fiatben wrote:Are the pins you refer to the ones of which I have one missing? YES
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Guess I need to go check what those cost, or else figure a way to fabricate one. Any suggestions, guys? Chuck up a long screw and file a point on it.
EDIT: (Because a seperate post did not "post")
Meanwhile....
Started trying to revive the miter gauge by removing the bar, popping it into my Zyliss vise and taking a brass wire wheel to it. It was heavily corroded and some of the pitting is deep.
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It will function reasonably after this cleaning, but I'm contemplating if I should try to flatten it, like the back of a plane iron, at risk of it becoming a hair shallow, or just wax the bar and the miter slot regularly. Any thoughts? I think it will work well even if 'pitted'.
The corrosion on the extension table tubes and posts is pretty bad also. Here is one tube after running half of it past the brass wire wheel.
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I have some concern as I'm sure I'm stripping off whatever plating it originally cames with. Any ideas on how to proceed? Does anyone make some kind of home chrome-plating kit? The inside is what matters any way. The outside only matters to the fence. IMHO smooth is good enough.
Good news is that the way tubes responded nicely to a light hand-sanding with 500 wet/dry. I'd do the same to the bench tubes but most of their plating is still intact and they work fine with a bit of crud on them since they are just support. Still, if someone knows how to clean them up without losing that finish, I'm all ears. The finer the abrasive, the better. As you said, it really is non-functional!
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It needs bending, not beating!:Dfiatben wrote:While I haven't really checked it thoroughly, the bar appears to be flat, just very pitted on the bottom side.
However, now that you mention it. The bar on my 500 is definitely bowed. I guess it's had one too many encounters with the floor. Has someone put up a thread about straightening out miter bars? I really don't see just banging on it with a hammer until it looks straight.
Recommended procedure?? I can see putting it in a vise and ending up over-correcting or ending up with a wavy bar. Been looking for a replacement on evil-bay but too much moolah for my resources.JPG40504 wrote:It needs bending, not beating!:D