Don’t eat the 102 year old paint. Noted, and thank you2 words - lead paint
Don’t eat the 102 year old paint. Noted, and thank you2 words - lead paint
I grew up on those chips. It's why I ended up liking the crayons so muchDon’t eat the 102 year old paint. Noted, and thank you
Former Marine?I grew up on those chips. It's why I ended up liking the crayons so much
How much amperage is available in 120VUnfortunately adding 220 in my shop is a no go for the time being, and I need something more turn key, I would rather be cutting wood than fixing one up. I’m curious though, what was it that that you didn’t like?
That’s actually really nice looking! I could definitely see that hanging on a wall.So about 2 weeks ago I was cleaning out my scraps and about to throw away a lot of little, narrow pieces and decided I just couldn't. So i planed all to same thickness (about 7/16”), cut to a uniform width, chopped a bunch of uniform parallelograms out on the mitre saw and rounded over edges.
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then started playing with shapes & colors (legos for woodworkers?) and ended up with this, about 40” x 21”. No clue what I will do with it but this is what I do while awaiting supplies for the next project.
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Depends, i have a 30 amp circuit for my dust collector, but my 1.75 hp table saw is on a 20 amp. For most hobby woodworkers a 120v 10” saw will do what you need. Just need to have sharp, clean blades and and an appropriate feed rate. All the used table saws I was recommending earlier are 120v and would run fine on a 20 amp circuit.How much amperage is available in 120V
What is the reason you cant take your shops feed and flip it to 240V?Depends, i have a 30 amp circuit for my dust collector, but my 1.75 hp table saw is on a 20 amp. For most hobby woodworkers a 120v 10” saw will do what you need. Just need to have sharp, clean blades and and an appropriate feed rate. All the used table saws I was recommending earlier are 120v and would run fine on a 20 amp circuit.
The saw and dust collector are on separate circuits, so no issues. The dust collector draws about 18 amps at steady state but a little over 20 on startup. The manufacturer recommends running a dedicated 30 amp circuit for it so that was what I did. 24 ft run of 10 ga wire to the box with a 30 amp breaker and RV type 30 amp outlet. My sub panel is a 100 amp panel. Took me about an hour to so in my basement workshop. I considered getting a 3 hp cabinet tablesaw when I bought this one but logistics and getting it into the basement swayed the decision to go with a contractors saw, however, I upgraded to cast iron wings and a 52” fence. Was just easier to get into the basement and works great for me and I mill almost all my own limber from rough sawn (buddy has a woodmizer mill) air dried wood.What is the reason you cant take your shops feed and flip it to 240V?
Ok, so if that was MY predicament I would not run the dust collector with my table saw.
I run a Powermatic 66 that came with a single ph 3hp Baldor motor. When wired 120V it requires 16 amps to run, I would hook it up to the 30 amp circuit also.
I would much rather have a bigger hp cabinet saw to use.
What amperage is the dust collector?
I get it, my father always used a Delta contractors saw.The saw and dust collector are on separate circuits, so no issues. The dust collector draws about 18 amps at steady state but a little over 20 on startup. The manufacturer recommends running a dedicated 30 amp circuit for it so that was what I did. 24 ft run of 10 ga wire to the box with a 30 amp breaker and RV type 30 amp outlet. My sub panel is a 100 amp panel. Took me about an hour to so in my basement workshop. I considered getting a 3 hp cabinet tablesaw when I bought this one but logistics and getting it into the basement swayed the decision to go with a contractors saw, however, I upgraded to cast iron wings and a 52” fence. Was just easier to get into the basement and works great for me and I mill almost all my own limber from rough sawn (buddy has a woodmizer mill) air dried wood.
Wife insisted on it as at the time my livelihood depended on having all my fingersI actually upgraded to a SawStop contractors a few years ago and have their T-glide fence. Works as well as the Delta Unifence. Have not had to adjust in the last 2 years. Remains true when I check it.
Ouch!!!I know what you mean. Don’t ask me how I know.
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That’s what I said! Amazing how well it healed up. Only a little numbness at the top. And for full disclosure, it was a thumb and not a finger.Ouch!!!