It’s worth it the tool will become valuable over time worth putting the money into. Electric planners are so nice for building many things surf boards included.
@floridarusticrepairs precision and smoothness of the foot on the skill 100 is what we like.The balance of the tool is spot on for what we use it for. Other planers that were modified for board building work well and cut deeper but Def not as good as the skill. Some would modify planers to mimic the position of the handle of the skill 100, makes it a bit better on 'em and again not as good. Do ya still have it and is it up for sale?
I have the same planer the original belt just broke. The replacement belt was not cheap 35$ but worth it. It runs great and cuts smooth. Great find keep up the great work
Thanks! Do you know why these specific models are sought after? PM me and maybe you can get this one. I only paid $8 for it and don't restore these for profit.
Skil 100. Coveted by surfboard shapers due to the unique depth control lever action. We bend the "clicker" up to disengage and the action becomes Zero to Full depth cut in a smooth action. Many of these tools also have the base cut to shorter length off the back of tool, depends on the Shaper's preference. Motors came in 5.5A and 7.5A versions. More Amps more value. Tool can be completely taken apart, down to cutter head, internal motor unit and spindle bearings (sealed units btw). You would need to fabricate or find a small puller for rear belt drive gear. Front one is keyed on shaft. At this point u could bead blast the housing and repaint or not. Up to you.
Thanks for the info! I was wondering why these were so sought after. It's a cool unit as is but I really wanted to sand and paint it to make it look even better. Maybe now I will.
I guess it would depend on what your plans are, sell or use it for your project's, I personally never sell anything now because as soon as I do I'll need it a week later. That said, if you do sell it, cutting the guy in on the profit will make you feel better about it, and you will have a friend for life. Great video
Thanks! I have a 1960's Black and Decker planer which is a good tool but has no value so I think I'll sell this one off. I will be cutting the seller in on the profit.
I would definitely sell it as is and split the money with the guy you bought it from. It has character as is and whoever ends up with it wouldn't be afraid to put it back to work.
We are entering into a deep, philosophical exploration.😉 In my view, this is a tool that should be used. It should be maintained, repaired and put back to WORK. Leave 'restoration' for things that go into a museum. If you are going to paint it, do so to preserve its future utility not its 'value'. After several years of collecting older power tools produced in the USA and Canada, I have serious doubts about the existence of a widespread interest in vintage portable power tool collecting as a formalized or organized hobby or pastime. Where are the magazines or journals? Where are the conferences and meets? Heck, where are the RUclips channels with a subscriber base to rival the numbers seen on vintage car channels. Canada is a country of 40 million citizens. Time after time I seem to be the only person in the country interested in buying a particular tool which it advertised nationally. I see the same phenomenon when I venture onto American Craigslist and see perfectly good tools at perfectly fair prices going unsold for months or years! Please do not use Ebay's fantasy land asking prices as an accurate indication of what old tools are worth. 😁
You raise a good point. Most old electrical tools have very little value which is why I was surprised to see these are actually in demand. Out of all of the tools which I've restored this is the first one to have any real value. With ebay I only look at what things have actually sold for.
@@floridarusticrepairs Thanks for taking the time to read my wordy comment. 😉Obviously, I value vintage tools made by our fellow citizens that were built to last. There is one noteworthy example that could show the way forward for portable tool collectors. Keith Rucker's Vintage Machinery RUclips channel devoted to stationary power tools has a large and devoted following and Keith does a great job.
@@rightlanehog3151 Thanks for the tip. I'll check his channel out. The volume of different manufacturing companies which were once in the USA was incredible. We'd never be able to do what we did in WW2 now and it's unfortunate and getting worse every day.
@@floridarusticrepairs Ditto for Canada. My house was built in 1978. I try to explain to people that every type of building material including plumbing and electrical was sourced domestically. The tools used by the tradesman to build it came from Canada (or the USA) and the appliances that were first installed were all built here. Today 95% of that is gone!!!!! After decades of toxic globalization we are finally seeing some interest in building up domestic capacity in our countries. It is now or never.
Thanks! I do that sometimes when I don't think I'll be able to review it from the video but I'll have to mention that for people who want to do this sort of hobby and aren't filming it.
Thanks! It seems people are split on opinions. I'd love to see it painted up because Hammered Silver Rustoleum is a near perfect match but a lot of people want ti to look original.
It’s worth it the tool will become valuable over time worth putting the money into. Electric planners are so nice for building many things surf boards included.
Thanks! I think seeing it with a fresh coat of paint will be satisfying.
Those planner are gold to surfboard shaper like me. You scored, $8.00. 😮. Nice work 🤙🏽
Thanks! Could you explain why surfboard shapers want this model over others? I'm very curious.
@floridarusticrepairs precision and smoothness of the foot on the skill 100 is what we like.The balance of the tool is spot on for what we use it for. Other planers that were modified for board building work well and cut deeper but Def not as good as the skill. Some would modify planers to mimic the position of the handle of the skill 100, makes it a bit better on 'em and again not as good. Do ya still have it and is it up for sale?
Man get a home chroming kit you could really make awesome custom parts like the grill make cool contrast.
Thanks! I'll look into that because you're right. I likely have a hundred different uses for something like that.
I have the same planer the original belt just broke. The replacement belt was not cheap 35$ but worth it. It runs great and cuts smooth. Great find keep up the great work
Thanks! Do you know why this particular model is considered superior to others?
The post is to keep cord out of way while using push to one side or other fyi popular in building ships not just surf boards higher quality then new.
Thanks for the info! I kind of figured that but thought it would be a bit more obvious.
Great video and planer. I've been looking for one the same model for years for a decent price for my small woodshop. Indeed hard to find.
Thanks! Do you know why these specific models are sought after? PM me and maybe you can get this one. I only paid $8 for it and don't restore these for profit.
Skil 100. Coveted by surfboard shapers due to the unique depth control lever action. We bend the "clicker" up to disengage and the action becomes Zero to Full depth cut in a smooth action. Many of these tools also have the base cut to shorter length off the back of tool, depends on the Shaper's preference. Motors came in 5.5A and 7.5A versions. More Amps more value. Tool can be completely taken apart, down to cutter head, internal motor unit and spindle bearings (sealed units btw). You would need to fabricate or find a small puller for rear belt drive gear. Front one is keyed on shaft. At this point u could bead blast the housing and repaint or not. Up to you.
Thanks for the info! I was wondering why these were so sought after. It's a cool unit as is but I really wanted to sand and paint it to make it look even better. Maybe now I will.
I would leave it the way it is - that's the way I would want to buy it!
Thanks for the input! It did clean up nicer than I expected.
I guess it would depend on what your plans are, sell or use it for your project's, I personally never sell anything now because as soon as I do I'll need it a week later. That said, if you do sell it, cutting the guy in on the profit will make you feel better about it, and you will have a friend for life. Great video
Thanks! I have a 1960's Black and Decker planer which is a good tool but has no value so I think I'll sell this one off. I will be cutting the seller in on the profit.
Looks good.....clear coat it with a matte.
I hadn't thought of clearcoating it. Thanks!
I would definitely sell it as is and split the money with the guy you bought it from. It has character as is and whoever ends up with it wouldn't be afraid to put it back to work.
Thanks! that's a legitimate point. Sometimes when I restore these I don't want to use them because they look too nice.
We are entering into a deep, philosophical exploration.😉 In my view, this is a tool that should be used. It should be maintained, repaired and put back to WORK. Leave 'restoration' for things that go into a museum. If you are going to paint it, do so to preserve its future utility not its 'value'. After several years of collecting older power tools produced in the USA and Canada, I have serious doubts about the existence of a widespread interest in vintage portable power tool collecting as a formalized or organized hobby or pastime. Where are the magazines or journals? Where are the conferences and meets? Heck, where are the RUclips channels with a subscriber base to rival the numbers seen on vintage car channels. Canada is a country of 40 million citizens. Time after time I seem to be the only person in the country interested in buying a particular tool which it advertised nationally. I see the same phenomenon when I venture onto American Craigslist and see perfectly good tools at perfectly fair prices going unsold for months or years! Please do not use Ebay's fantasy land asking prices as an accurate indication of what old tools are worth. 😁
You raise a good point. Most old electrical tools have very little value which is why I was surprised to see these are actually in demand. Out of all of the tools which I've restored this is the first one to have any real value. With ebay I only look at what things have actually sold for.
@@floridarusticrepairs Thanks for taking the time to read my wordy comment. 😉Obviously, I value vintage tools made by our fellow citizens that were built to last. There is one noteworthy example that could show the way forward for portable tool collectors. Keith Rucker's Vintage Machinery RUclips channel devoted to stationary power tools has a large and devoted following and Keith does a great job.
@@rightlanehog3151 Thanks for the tip. I'll check his channel out. The volume of different manufacturing companies which were once in the USA was incredible. We'd never be able to do what we did in WW2 now and it's unfortunate and getting worse every day.
@@floridarusticrepairs Ditto for Canada. My house was built in 1978. I try to explain to people that every type of building material including plumbing and electrical was sourced domestically. The tools used by the tradesman to build it came from Canada (or the USA) and the appliances that were first installed were all built here. Today 95% of that is gone!!!!! After decades of toxic globalization we are finally seeing some interest in building up domestic capacity in our countries. It is now or never.
Tip take photos of wiring before in case someone or something distracts you
Thanks! I do that sometimes when I don't think I'll be able to review it from the video but I'll have to mention that for people who want to do this sort of hobby and aren't filming it.
Leave it the way it is.
Thanks! It seems people are split on opinions. I'd love to see it painted up because Hammered Silver Rustoleum is a near perfect match but a lot of people want ti to look original.
When in doubt............don't!
thanks! That''s usually the safest route.
I say paint it
Thanks! I'm so tempted because Hammered Silver is a near exact match and it would look like new.
Leave it alone
Thanks for the tip. That seems to be the consensus.