Nice (?) score today

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FORDification
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Nice (?) score today

Post by FORDification »

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So whaddya think? I got this Hammond Slider Trim-O-Saw today for free from a local newspaper. This is a small precision table-top saw originally designed for use in a print shop, for cutting metal type, back in the days when lead time was still used. I saw this last summer in the back room of his newspaper and expressed an interest in it then, but he wanted more than I wanted to pay. Today I talked with him again and he told me if I wanted it to come and get it. It seems to have most of the attachments, too. The only 'bad' thing about this is the 3-phase motor....I'm not sure my shop is set up for that. I CAN run 220V with it though, so I might be getting this wired in fairly soon and start playing around with it.

There is a sliding, ball-bearing supported section of the table which resembles the sliding tables on the more expensive and precise woodworking table saws currently made... however, miter cuts in more than one plane require a jig, since the Hammond's blades do not tilt. The control on the front raises and lowers the 7" blade, and there is a micrometer attachment on the top of the sliding table. There is even a built-in clamp for doing the piece down to the table.

Since nobody uses metal type anymore, I understand these are are showing up fairly frequently in woodworking shops. Doing a search of completed auctions on E-bay show these things for for between $300 and $600.

I'm thinking about doing some modifications to this for metal working....kind of like a chop-saw on steriods. I'd change out the current blade for a cutoff blade, which would allow me to make nice square cuts in anything I decide to fabricate, and I could raise the blade and use it like a drum sander for finishing parts. Anyway, for free...I couldn't turn it down.

You can never have too many power tools, right? ;)
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Tim P.
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re: Nice (?) score today

Post by Tim P. »

The one that dies with the most win's????? :lol: :cry: :lol: :hmm:
though i would have alittle fun with this, its actualley a nice piece.
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re: Nice (?) score today

Post by fuzzier1 »

Keith

Did you ever get this saw running? I have a Milling machine in my garage that is 3ph 240v that I have made a 3ph converter for and it works great. I just finished making this converter but I have built one before and it will run the mill with no problems. I built the converter for a total of $130.00 (could of saved a little but I bought the encloser, new, from a electrical supply company and went a little larger than I actually needed) but the rest of the parts I got off ebay. Anyways let us know if the saw works for what you wanted.

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re: Nice (?) score today

Post by FORDification »

Actually, no....it's still sitting in the corner of my shop. I'd decided to just find a good 110V motor for it, but haven't gotten around to doing that yet.

So how did you put together the converter? I'd be interested in how that's put together and what parts I'd need to make one.
____| \__
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re: Nice (?) score today

Post by fuzzier1 »

I will try to put together a "how to" for this as I was planing on it anyway. Basically you use a couple of capacitors, another 3ph motor, a relay, and a contactor and once it is done it produces 3ph power off of a single phase power source.

Bill
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re: Nice (?) score today

Post by flyboy2610 »

That's a no-no. :nono:
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re: Nice (?) score today

Post by mcarlson11 »

whaaaaa?
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re: Nice (?) score today

Post by flyboy2610 »

Someone posted a link that directed users to his commercial non truck related site.
CobraF100 deleted the post.
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Post by morganater »

aren't the blades REALLY expensive for those?
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