🟢 Old Planer Blades Sharpening & Aligning. The Simplest Method
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- Опубликовано: 15 окт 2024
- Inthis video i show the simplest method of aligning and sharpening old planer blades using table saw.
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Этот метод подходит если полотно ровное, но если оно будет слегка изогнуто по плоскости то ровной заточка этим методом не получится.
Здóрово! Можно из рессор фуговальный или рейсмусовый станок сделать! Лайк!
Great idea, where did you get that grinding stone from?
This is electrocorundum grinding wheel, i bought in local market, thanks
As I asked in another comment on one of you videos - which planer are you using?
Thank you for your question, it is a Scheppech woodstar PT105 10 X 5", but planer blades you see in this video are from another one.
GRINwood I thought so. These look too beefy to be the Scheppach ones.
Do you think their new models are worthwhile getting? Like the Scheppach HT1070 for example?
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Misleading video maybe the poster doesn’t know anything about proper sharpening.
Or maybe he does and only cares about views?
I am curious what is wrong with what he did? Maybe a finer stone, and or a way to hone them sharper yet? But that blade was in bad condition, he squared it up, and it looked fairly sharp (or a lot sharper than previous, and square with no nicks left in it).
@shawnfinger5287 It's true he did get the Nick's out and the edge is in much better shape.
Here the problem with that method. The blade need to clamped in a fixture because that's how the blade will be clamped in the head.
Nearly all planer and jointer knives will have a bow especially thin ones.
It's important the edge is straight as possible to set the knives accurately.
Knives sharped without a fixture with be concave or convex. It's the one part of a planer of jointer that benefits from precision.
Knives also need to be in balance also especially with larger diameter heads.
Adding to AugWest comment, the next thing the author did that was amature, was
his use of those stupid dangerous push sticks on the table saw. If you want to make
a board kickback just use those things. Especially with short stock.
A proper push-stick isn't a stick at all, it's a hold-down device that applies pressure
directly down on the top of the stock preventing the uplift created by the back side of
the table saw blade. The handle of the ones I make is HIGH above the max blade height.
Just search it.