Thanks for the video. Exact same problem as mine. After watching you I realised I could take out the four supporting bars individually without disturbing the lock mechanism or the gear system. This meant I wouldn’t have to spend time after reassembly checking and adjusting the parallelism of the planed cut. After cleaning and light rub with emery paper reassembled and it worked a treat. I used wd40 which can get sticky over time so will get some light lubricant. Once again thank you as you saved me a lot of headscratching and bad language..
Nice job! I have found that my Ryobi table saw binds up also, but only in the cold weather.. So I find my self dis-assembling it every winter for cleaning..
Thanks, I can't wait to tackle mine now. I could of used it several times, but too busy to tear it apart to figure it out. Edit: there's another video that shows a much easier way.
Maybe the lubricant has gummed up a little. Happened to me on something else that had close running fit parts. Sprayed wd40 for about a week, then heated up the parts with a heat gun. Cleaned everything and re lubed. You did a good job, thanks for sharing!
Yeah seems like a common problem, I’m in the northeast and especially this time of year when it’s humid I tend to get a thin rust scaling on tools. Unfortunately taking the whole carriage off, oiling lightly and reinstalling my just be all yours needs.
I need to make 2 boxes to put a 734 in for checked baggage on an airline. Can the base be removed easily? Can you tell me the exact measurements (LxWxH) of the base as well as the dimensions of the unit without the base? Thanks much
My 735 fell about three feet onto cement. It seems like it’s all fine, I’m just worried. The rods and body all seem fine. The only thing I see was a extremely slight bend in the base on a corner. Do you think that drop could compromise the accuracy or level
I think as long as the bed is flat and it’s leaving a flat surface that’s parallel to the bed when you run material through it. Just run the lift through a full up and down cycle to make sure it moves correctly and doesn’t bind. Check the drive belts ( if it has a belt like the 734) and make sure nothing is cracked. You just don’t want to fire it up and have it self destruct
@@whitebrookwoodworking760 Yes after watching this video i was able to get it all apart. I had to clean it pretty good. I bought it used and it looked like it was never cleaned. After I got all the plastic ogg i used a wire brush to get all the stuck saw dust out of any moving part. Then I hit all the threads and slide rails with some WD-40. Works like a champ now!
Actually ran it last night with a bunch of black walnut and it ran great. At this point I’ll run it until it gives up the ghost and switch to something heavier duty.