"Dozens of people spontaneously combust each year. It's just not really widely reported." -- David St. Hubbins
Type: Posts; User: Steve Wurster; Keyword(s):
"Dozens of people spontaneously combust each year. It's just not really widely reported." -- David St. Hubbins
That might be the main culprit right there. If the browser was running all night and there was an ad on the page, there's a pretty good chance that ad (or any ad on any tab) was consuming resources...
That's a nice one and looks lightweight.
I have the big Felder one for my Hammer K3 and it's a major pain to use. It's heavy, difficult to put on and take off the saw, and the adjustments are...
Wow, that is amazing. Fantastic work!
Thanks. That model is definitely narrow than I need, but otherwise that's the general style I want.
The Harvey saws are setup so the front bracket is actually just a single "straight" piece that...
That's probably exactly the design I want. You say your saw is an LT18? The base on that is apparently around 15" wide, so the axle on that one might not be long enough for my needs. Do you have a...
That base look more like what I want, although the one I found on Amazon has a foot pedal style for the 3rd wheel rather than a Johnson bar. I'm expecting the saw to be a little tippy in this setup,...
That is indeed what I thought that model base looked like. Unfortunately, that is the opposite of what I want. I want the fixed wheels at the bottom of the spine. Thanks for the offer, but that...
I just looked now and the product number you provided is of the saw itself. The factory base setup for that seems to have the 2 fixed wheels in the "front" and the 3rd rotating wheel at the base of...
That’s exactly what I’m looking for. Do you happen to have pictures of the base you used to have? I’ve seen conflicting pictures for even the one you mentioned.
I have full casters on a homemade...
Does anyone own a Laguna bandsaw whose base is approximately 18" wide? If so, what model is your saw? Additionally, if you have a semi-live skid base on your saw with 2 wheels on the spine side and...
Yeah, I was afraid of that, and I'm not sure I want to do that on something so new. When this was being installed I told the contractor that I would have to get back into that bay at a later date...
I don't see any exposed fasteners except the nail(s) holding up the aluminum fascia. These pieces are not old; they were installed new back in September / October. I'm not overly keen on removing...
I remember seeing that video years ago! In fact, that's the first thing I thought of when remembering that they made stair climbers.
I called a local tool rental place this morning but all of the...
Anyone know how to remove (without damaging, and later replace) this vinyl soffit? I need to remove some of that soffit, do a little bit of work in the bay, and then replace the soffit. The pieces...
If I'm able to remove the motor and wheels as Rod suggests then it can probably come down on just my hand truck and without a ramp. I won't really know until I look at those parts later today.
...
I'm going to look at removing the motor and wheels later today when I get the unit off the shipping company's pallet. It does have cast iron wheels, so I imagine they weigh a decent amount on their...
Do you happen to know what model still allowed you to go down stairs even when the battery died?
This is only one straight set of stairs, so no issues about turning.
I am definitely worried about the battery dying before completing the move; that would totally suck. lol
By refrigerator dolly, do you just mean one with a second set of wheels that let you...
It's standing upright. The saw is about 72" tall on its own, and it arrives bolted to a pallet that's only slightly wider than the base of the saw. That was then placed on top of a larger...
The table is already off; it's packaged "separately" in a vertical position and I already carried it down into my basement. It probably weighs about 100-125 pounds on its own.
I thought about...
Anyone use one of those battery powered stair climbers (e.g. Powermate, Elektro Truck) to go down steep stairs? All the pictures and videos I see seem to be either on "typical" stairs (e.g. ~37...
What you're describing is probably best known as a "belt manlift".
We are basing this design off a piece we like, however we've only seen that piece online and not in any stores. So we only have overall dimensions and guesstimates for other parts of the design. We...
This page from Rob Porcaro has some information that might be helpful: https://www.rpwoodwork.com/blog/2014/12/31/jointer-parallelism/