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Thread: Cart for a power feeder

  1. #1
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    Cart for a power feeder

    Anyone have ideas or suggestions for a table / mobile cart to mount a power feeder? My idea is to build it to be moved with a pallet jack, so I can easily block up the feeder to the height of whatever machine. Then clamp the cart directly to the machine. It would be built with a top at the same height as my lowest machine, the jointer. Weight it heavily at the bottom using scrap steel, iron, or sand. Mount the feeder near a corner of the top to reach over onto machines. Top would be steel, maybe 1/4". When not in use, swing the feeder over the top of the "cart" and move with the pallet jack.

    It would be used at the tablesaw, bandsaw, shaper, jointer, and router table. I just ordered a CoMatic DC40 with extended arm in 110v.
    Last edited by Jonathan Jung; 02-06-2023 at 5:15 PM.
    JonathanJungDesign.com

  2. #2
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    Aug 2021
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    My worry about such a system would be the slightest bit of play between the feeder cart and the machine it is being used on will throw off the alignment of the feeder from the machine. You are always going to want to have the feeder canted in towards the fence slightly to keep the stock against fence. A few minutes of angle rotational shift between the feeder cart and the machine and you have lost this alignment. Or even a slight splay of the cart from the machine is going to throw off the alignment. I have had this problem more often than I would like to admit by just forgetting to lock down one of the arm joints tightly. To make such a setup successful I think you would have to have the feeder cart and the machine physically connected together to keep the alignment. But I haven't tried it so I can't say for sure.

    An alternate approach, of course, is to have multiple mounting bases, one for each machine so the feeder can be moved between the machines. For my power feeder I would have to remove the feeder head and move the arm and feeder separately due to their weight which is what I am guessing lead you to consider the cart. My feeder is great for my shaper but when I look at adding mounts to other machines I question how much "I" would really use it. A feeder on the jointer sounds like a great option but the way I work I don't joint the hundreds of board feet at one time to make adding a base to my jointer feasible. The same with a table saw, how often do I rip that much lumber in one batch to make it worth while setting up the feeder? This is just me by myself in my home shop... I can see how even a small one man business might make feeders on these machines worth while.

    Just my thoughts, don't let me dissuade you.
    Last edited by Michael Schuch; 02-06-2023 at 5:18 PM.

  3. #3
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    I would clamp the power feeder "bench" to the machine in use, to keep it from rotating.

    Additional stands would be about $1000, and the stands would get in the way of using the tablesaw and bandsaw for other cuts, so I'd be taking them on/off anyway.
    JonathanJungDesign.com

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Jonathan Jung View Post
    I would clamp the power feeder "bench" to the machine in use, to keep it from rotating.

    Additional stands would be about $1000, and the stands would get in the way of using the tablesaw and bandsaw for other cuts, so I'd be taking them on/off anyway.
    Clamping the bench of the stand to the machine in use does sound like a good idea that would go a long way to keeping everything lined up.

    I have an old 3ph Jet 1hp power feeder that I picked up used. When I looked at additional mounting brackets they were in the $100 range at the time. I figured that I would have to use a cherry picker or similar to move my feeder between machines which kind of killed the idea for me. I considered some sort of cart like you are talking about but it didn't work out to make sense to me. Mainly due to the amount of work in moving everything around vs the amount of work the feeder would save me. But like I said I work in pretty small batches of wood though.
    Last edited by Michael Schuch; 02-06-2023 at 5:37 PM.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2012
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    North Dana, Masachusetts
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    I have a cart that is the same height as the rip saw. I slide the feeder onto the cart to be able to rip wider than 14 5/8". ( I don't use sheet goods.) Fortunately, the only other machine I need that feeder for is the shaper, and it's the same height.

    I have done preety well with baby feeders. I have two. Iuse one on a 5 hp 3 phase 1 1/4" spindle shaper. It's amazing what that thing will feed.

  6. #6
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    Sep 2016
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    Modesto, CA, USA
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    Do not use sand for ballast, use gravel instead. Much easier to contain and easier to clean up before it gets into moving parts.
    BilL D

  7. #7
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    Dec 2006
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    Toronto Ontario
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    Should work fine.

    I have a feeder mounted on a saw/shaper, I swing it off the rear of the shaper to use on the jointer…..Rod

  8. #8
    I think it's a good idea. You want a solidly constructed unit with a low center of gravity, and keep the feeder centered when moving the cart around. It's easy to tip even a moderately heavy machine with a feeder hanging out on an extended shaft - a cart on a pallet jack could be precarious. An old cast iron machine table would make a good cart top for bolting the feeder base and clamping to your stationary machines, or a junk machine including base that's low enough for your purpose. Visegrip clamps would be handy for attaching the cart and machine top flanges together.

    At my old day job we had a tablesaw next to a post. I hung a shelf on the post level with the saw so we could store a feeder there. When it was needed the feeder would walk itself under power across the extension table and the base was bolted to the main saw table.

    I once saw a powerfeed mounted to the ceiling above a saw. No rip width limit there.

    The main thing about running a feeder not attached directly to a machine is that the two units must not move relative to one another. Clamping your cart should be fine but it needs to be absolutely reliable.
    Last edited by Kevin Jenness; 02-13-2023 at 9:38 PM.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
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    West Lafayette, IN
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    I’d go with magnets before I’d use a cart. Mag switch had or is coming out with a kit to use with a power feeder. Or DIY one.

  10. #10
    Quote Originally Posted by Matt Day View Post
    I’d go with magnets before I’d use a cart. Mag switch had or is coming out with a kit to use with a power feeder. Or DIY one.
    They do offer one https://magswitch.com/product/magswi...-feeder-mount/. Still, even if you trust a magnetic mount on a big powerfeed you have to muscle it around the shop somehow. The only advantage I see for the magswitch would be not tapping the machine tables, and the cart idea would take care of that.

  11. #11
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    Here's what I came up with! It's very stable and easy to scootch around, I put UHMW on the bottom of the feet. Don't even need a pallet jack. I can clamp it to the bandsaw, jointer, tablesaw, or router table. I've run about 1200' of cherry through it already, ripping and dados, and it works really well. I may use 1/2" steel plate over the top to help stiffen it, but it is working fine so far.

    Only bummer is that the DC40 feeder doesn't go any slower than 5ft/min, which isn't slow enough for some resawing I want to do.

    image0.jpg
    JonathanJungDesign.com

  12. Nice, I'm looking to do something similar in my shop

  13. #13
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    Just use a lifting table/cart.<br>. Hydraulic ones are self contained but leak down over time. Electrics need power cord or battery.
    Bill D.<br>
    <br>
    <a href="https://www.amazon.com/VEVOR-TF23-Hydraulic-Capacity-Transportation/dp/B0CC998DZS/ref=sr_1_2_sspa?c=ts&amp;keywords=Lift%2BTables&am p;qid=1699198796&amp;refinements=p_89%3AVEVOR&amp; s=industrial&amp;sr=1-2-spons&amp;ts_id=256370011&amp;sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZ T1zcF9hdGY&amp;th=1" target="_blank">https://www.amazon.com/VEVOR-TF23-Hydraulic-Capacity-Transportation/dp/B0CC998DZS/ref=sr_1_2_sspa?c=ts&amp;keywords=Lift%2BTables&am p;qid=1699198796&amp;refinements=p_89%3AVEVOR&amp; s=industrial&amp;sr=1-2-spons&amp;ts_id=256370011&amp;sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZ T1zcF9hdGY&amp;th=1</a>
    Attached Images Attached Images
    Last edited by Bill Dufour; 11-05-2023 at 10:45 AM.

  14. #14
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    Quote Originally Posted by Bill Dufour View Post
    Just use a lifting table/cart.<br>. Hydraulic ones are self contained but leak down over time. Electrics need power cord or battery.
    Bill D.<br>
    <br>
    <a href="https://www.amazon.com/VEVOR-TF23-Hydraulic-Capacity-Transportation/dp/B0CC998DZS/ref=sr_1_2_sspa?c=ts&amp;keywords=Lift%2BTables&am p;qid=1699198796&amp;refinements=p_89%3AVEVOR&amp; s=industrial&amp;sr=1-2-spons&amp;ts_id=256370011&amp;sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZ T1zcF9hdGY&amp;th=1" target="_blank">https://www.amazon.com/VEVOR-TF23-Hydraulic-Capacity-Transportation/dp/B0CC998DZS/ref=sr_1_2_sspa?c=ts&amp;keywords=Lift%2BTables&am p;qid=1699198796&amp;refinements=p_89%3AVEVOR&amp; s=industrial&amp;sr=1-2-spons&amp;ts_id=256370011&amp;sp_csd=d2lkZ2V0TmFtZ T1zcF9hdGY&amp;th=1</a>
    I had a cart like that. It would settle an inch just in one session of sawing. And there was so much play in the casters, caster locks, and frame. Not reliable enough for a power feeder.

    I've been using my "cart" above here and there. It's pretty easy to shove or pallet jack it over to a machine, clamp it, and go.
    JonathanJungDesign.com

  15. #15
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    May 2012
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    Gatineau, Québec
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    298
    Nice work Jonathan.

    Regards,

    Jacques

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