Bob,
If it not too late, I would try and loosen and move the collar before drilling the hole.
Bob
Bob,
If it not too late, I would try and loosen and move the collar before drilling the hole.
Bob
The collar is able to be loosened and moved... the issue is that this only gets me about 1 inch of movement relief on the shaft before it hits the back of the cabinet... and I need it to move closer to 4 inches in order for the front of the shaft to be free, and 6 inches for it to be free with enough room for the worm gear to be removed towards the front of the cabinet.
The other option that I can think of is to gently sand the entire shaft to remove paint (etc.) in hopes that the worm gear and collar could both be slid off the shaft the other direction towards the back of the cabinet (i.e. pulling the shaft forward through the hole near where the hand wheel is attached).. I fear that this is a really long way to slide the worm gear and I'd be willing to bet it's going to be a very very tight fit the entire time. (whereas sliding the worm hear in the other direction is the direction is was originally assembled from... and bare, lightly oiled surface)
- Bob R.
Collegeville PA (30 minutes west of Philly)
Bob
I can no offer no intelligent advice for you on this problem, but I have enjoyed the story so far.
You have made me feel better about the shop cleaning project I started last month and I am now in week 6 of reorganization and dust collection upgrade.
I would hazard a guess that those components are installed prior to the trunnion being attached to the cabinet. That's why there is no clearance to remove the component because of the cabinet blocking the motion.
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
I think Jim is correct. There are only four bolts on the "corners'' holding the trunnion in place in the cabinet. I think your life would be far easier if you pulled it out of the cabinet first and then you will not have to drill a hole and it will be far easier to work on. I would also scratch the location of the trunnion corners on the cabinet with a screwdriver to make reassembly easier. Hope this all works out for you .
So the entire "trunion assembly" (probably not the right term) comes out as one piece once those corner bolts are removed? I was concerned that I'd be left with many individual pieces, with my experience thus far being that they are very difficult to get back together again.
Also, my guess is that this approach is probably easiest if I remove the motor first (else it will be pretty heavy to move all together) - I think that's just a bolt and a cotter pin holding that in place if memory serves.
Last edited by Bob Riefer; 12-03-2019 at 1:41 PM.
- Bob R.
Collegeville PA (30 minutes west of Philly)
Yes, that's actually the key design that makes it a "cabinet saw"...the trunnion mounted to the cabinet rather than to the table.
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
Yes I get that. I’m just wondering if it all comes out as a single
piece. There are multiple moving parts entailed
- Bob R.
Collegeville PA (30 minutes west of Philly)
AFAIK, the whole trunnion should lift out after you remove the bolts and remove any hand-wheels, etc., that penetrate through the cabinet. But I don't have a cabinet saw to physically look at to confirm.
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...
I can't tell you how Grizzly does it with that saw but with the PM66 the assembly minus the shaft that tilts the arbor. Because PM66 has a splitter there's a shaft that supports the splitter that has to be removed first. I would guess it comes out pretty easy but you just need to look at parts that might prevent it from coming out. If it's similar to a Unisaw you should be able to find a video on that saw to help you.
Better then scratching around the piece to be removed is a quick spraypaint job. May want to do a quick masking with tinfoil to control over spray. Makes getting everything back in place much easier.
Bil lD
OMG, if you want to marvel at someone's knowledge (while also cowering in bewilderment):
http://wiki.vintagemachinery.org/How...%20Unisaw.ashx
- Bob R.
Collegeville PA (30 minutes west of Philly)
BIG WIN!!!
My hack method worked.
I sanded and polished the shaft until the stop collar moved freely. I cut a hole in back of the cabinet. A couple more steps. Worm gear removed without disassembling the entire saw.
New gear should be here tomorrow.
- Bob R.
Collegeville PA (30 minutes west of Philly)
New worm gear arrived, and fits the existing shaft!
Sadly, they (of course) did not send the needed set screw that goes with the gear, and it never even occurred to me to wonder about that... I assumed those two items traveled together as a set (I forgot that this is bizarro table saw land where everything is difficult).
As noted in my other thread in this saga... I picked up my new saw yesterday.. so I'm momentarily shifting gears (pun intended) to get that setup and working, and then I'll return to this repair before selling the saw.
- Bob R.
Collegeville PA (30 minutes west of Philly)
Fortunately, set screws are easily obtainable from TrueValue and other hardware retailers...you just need to determine the threading. Take the part with you so you can work that out in the store.
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The most expensive tool is the one you buy "cheaply" and often...