I have a jet molder planer that needs some work. The bed is frozen from sitting up. When I get my new shop finished I'm gonna refurbish my jet so I can learn how to use it. Thank you for such an informative video!
Frank, I just started moving into a new shop (2× the size!🎉) I've deliberately made space for my 12" WM because my wife wants picture hanger cornice molding, a lot of it.
I have the Woodmaster 18" planner/molder! I love it and have cut many feet of molding! 5 HP, 230v cutter head and separate adjustable speed feed 110 v motor!
you need to clean the wood chips out of equipment before it sits for a long time - the wood chips hold moisture and promote rusting. I'd also spray things down with at least some WD40 or some other anti-corrosive treatement before storing stuff. If it's surface rust, a little scotchbrite should clean it up easily. I use scotchbrite pad and WD40 on a random orbital sander to clean table saw tops, planer and jointer beds, and drill press tables, etc etc. They usually clean up really nice.
For long term storage leaving wood on steel is going to cause corrosion. The acids in the wood plus the moisture it contains do the nasty. Always vacuum and blow out any tool that is not going to be in use. That looks very similar to the BelSaw version.
Frank, was that a painting of your dogs or was it a picture taken with a camera? If it was a painting did you paint it yourself? I love your dogs and your videos. I know your wife will be very proud of the gift.
@@woodandmetalshoptime8048 I believe so, they seem to have some differences though. The one we have is a Belsaw, and uses chains to drive the feed rolls, as yours seems to use belts. My Dad and another man went to the factory to pick it up, I think that was around 1978. I think as the years went on, they found more ways to make them cheaper. That was our first planer, a far cry from the big 36" 12,000 pound monster that we have now, along with another 24" Oliver with the carbide head,what a sweet machine that planer is. Oh that's the "real" Oliver not the new knock off brand that just uses the name.
I have a jet molder planer that needs some work. The bed is frozen from sitting up. When I get my new shop finished I'm gonna refurbish my jet so I can learn how to use it. Thank you for such an informative video!
Frank, I just started moving into a new shop (2× the size!🎉) I've deliberately made space for my 12" WM because my wife wants picture hanger cornice molding, a lot of it.
Thanks for sharing Frank!
I have the Woodmaster 18" planner/molder!
I love it and have cut many feet of molding!
5 HP, 230v cutter head and separate adjustable speed feed 110 v motor!
Thanks Frank, very informative and well presented. Appreciate your videos a lot.
You're welcome, glad you enjoyed it!
Thanks, Frank.
A good friend, had a full on, four head Woods molder, and he still used his Belsaw for short run jobs that didn't warrant setting up the big machine.
Good job looks nice
great video thanks
you need to clean the wood chips out of equipment before it sits for a long time - the wood chips hold moisture and promote rusting. I'd also spray things down with at least some WD40 or some other anti-corrosive treatement before storing stuff. If it's surface rust, a little scotchbrite should clean it up easily. I use scotchbrite pad and WD40 on a random orbital sander to clean table saw tops, planer and jointer beds, and drill press tables, etc etc. They usually clean up really nice.
Yep, that's the answer. I normally keep all metal surfaces treated but neglected to deal with this one properly.
i like the artwork! cool machine ! hey why dont people have outfeed tables for planers and molders and such??
Nice job frank …
For long term storage leaving wood on steel is going to cause corrosion. The acids in the wood plus the moisture it contains do the nasty. Always vacuum and blow out any tool that is not going to be in use. That looks very similar to the BelSaw version.
Yep, I messed up on that.
Frank, was that a painting of your dogs or was it a picture taken with a camera? If it was a painting did you paint it yourself? I love your dogs and your videos. I know your wife will be very proud of the gift.
It's a painting that I commissioned. I have zero artistic ability.
Sawdust will draw moisture
Very similar to Belsaw planers. I think both were made by RBI. I think they were sold under the RBI name as well.
I think you are correct. I had forgotten about RBI. I wonder if the Craftsman version was another.
@@woodandmetalshoptime8048 I believe so, they seem to have some differences though. The one we have is a Belsaw, and uses chains to drive the feed rolls, as yours seems to use belts. My Dad and another man went to the factory to pick it up, I think that was around 1978. I think as the years went on, they found more ways to make them cheaper. That was our first planer, a far cry from the big 36" 12,000 pound monster that we have now, along with another 24" Oliver with the carbide head,what a sweet machine that planer is. Oh that's the "real" Oliver not the new knock off brand that just uses the name.
Just bought a V-helical head for my Grizzly 20 inch planer. Need to install it.
@@woodandmetalshoptime8048 I installed one about 6 months ago for a customer. It was a Byrd head for a 20" Powermatic.
' Loctite 8005 Anti sliding adhere
Belt anti-skating '
?
Time for you too combine your new fun drone flying with your old passion cub cadet
Quadcopter Cub Cadet you sit on and fly with a controller