finally found the drill press sanding disc on Amazon. The rating was a 3.3 out of five so guess I will not be buying this. I never buy anything under a 4.4. 1:00
I have searched Amazon, and cannot find this sanding disc. I searched under Taylor two works. I searched under K Tools I searched under drill press, sanding disc, got nothing. Any help here? 13:20
Too bad your customer service sucks and you don’t bother responding to emails. Was gonna buy a few of these but not anymore. I’ll take my business elsewhere.
Curious...have you done a head to head comparison with a Tormek? I have both and like both. Looks like both go to 1000 grit. If I can get same sharpness, cubitron wins due to time saving and ease of use. Thanks in advance
¿ wieso kann man niergends auf dem ganzen taylor-shop die hölzerne schleifmatrize finden, an welcher der spezialist den essiggetränkten rohstal einen zur längsachse rechtwinklig angepassten 22° schneidwinkel verpassen tuut
Hi, just seen this video. you say you drilled an 11/16th hole in the front jaws for the threaded part to pass through. As the rod is 11/16th diameter doesn't this give you severe racking problems as the rod will be fixed perpendicular to the rear jaws. Apart from that, it's a really good idea. The other problem is that the Pony Jorgensen parts have been discontinued (at least they are not available any more in the UK).
Very valuable video, very detailed and well explained always had my Dad around to sharpen the chisels, you've thought me another great skill, thrilled I can bring my old chisels back to life
I had tried scrapers for a while and I never could get a good Burr I mean a good shaving from my scraper blade and I saw the accuser with Stumpy Nubs and I ordered one and I have used a scraper blade ever since there's one that stays pretty much on my bench all the time I don't know who came up with the ackee bird but man I'd like to shake their hand it's a fantastic tool
It seems like this is a CMT marketing gag. Neither dado blades nor any other machine tools are or were banned in the EU. I wonder where these ridiculois claims come from and how they persist so stubbornly. In the EU you can generally use whatever you want, except if you have employed workers in your shop (journeymen or apprentices). If you have these, you are to abide to the rules set up by the workers' compensation board. Which, again, does NOT ban anything as long as long as the base requirement of safe operation is given. Which means a sufficient shaft length and machine weight (and, well, reasonable power). So in a commercial setting with hired employees you wouldn't be able to use a dado on a small table saw both legally and physically, but who cares. On a format saw, which you will almost certainly use, it's perfectly possible and allowable, and on mills the likes are even commonplace (though named differently).
Can't you square your fence to the miter slot by simply lining up the face of the fence with the edge of the miter slot? A piece wood (the width of the slot and proud of the saw table) or even just a ruler placed against the wall of the slot, will show any gaps indicating misalignment.
I prefer the Fastener-Cal Calipers. You can limit them to 1/32 accuracy which is quite good enough. Getting a reading of 77/128 is annoying. Yes metric people....mm makes more sense.
I wouldn't use any dado set but this one on a SawStop. I don't have a SawStop, so I'll continue to use my Amana dado set, which I invested $300+ to buy. The teeth are all carbide on the Amana but I assume these CMT Locked Dado Pro are not since there is no mention that they are not just carbide tipped. That makes these disposable or with maybe a one time resharpen?