http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2579938883
I don't get it, to be honest. What on earth would you use such a
monstrosity for? Jointing an entire tabletop at once? But how would you
thickness plane it afterwards?
I don't think I care to even guess how much that weighs. Nor how he lost or
broke it.
--randy
"john moorhead" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:wjsDb.552333$HS4.4194923@attbi_s01...
> R -
>
> I think someone already posted this, and apparently, beasties such as this
> were used to joint framing timbers for wooden ships prior to planing. So,
> yes, if you had a 30' beam 14" wide, this woul just be the ticket. Don't
> ask me how you'd move that timber. I'm thinking it would take more than a
> Grizzly 1/2 stock feeder....
But wouldn't all that iron be better arranged as 16 or 18" wide instead of
30", and 180" long instead of 90"? Keeping a 30' beam balanced on 7.5'
table doesn't seem trivial, let alone *moving* it.
Let's just pray there's no kickback.
--randy
"Randy Chapman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:szqDb.562383$Fm2.527285@attbi_s04...
>
> http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2579938883
>
> I don't get it, to be honest. What on earth would you use such a
> monstrosity for? Jointing an entire tabletop at once? But how would you
> thickness plane it afterwards?
>
> I don't think I care to even guess how much that weighs. Nor how he lost
or
> broke it.
>
> --randy
>
Sounds good to me. I've run into more than a few situations where a 12"
jointer wasn't enough. If I had that I might never face that problem again.
Then again it would fill up most of my shop so I couldn't do anything...
--
John McGaw
[Knoxville, TN, USA]
Return address will not work. Please
reply in group or through my website:
http://johnmcgaw.com
In article <szqDb.562383$Fm2.527285@attbi_s04>,
Randy Chapman <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2579938883
>
>I don't get it, to be honest. What on earth would you use such a
>monstrosity for?
That's *OBVIOUS* flattening Home Depot plywood sheets.
<badly muffled guffaw>
> Jointing an entire tabletop at once? But how would you
>thickness plane it afterwards?
*NO* problem. My _high-school_ shop had a 24" planer. At the 'technical
high school' the 'furniture factory' wood-shop had a 36" throat triple-drum
sander. Somewhere around 50HP, I'm guessing. I _saw_ it drawing 70+ amps
(not working hard) at 480V -- the operator panel had ammeters for each of
the 4 main motors: drum 1, drum 2, drum 3, and the feeder. The height-
adjustment motor didn't rate its own meter.
The machine "near" that sander was an industrial-strength dovetail machine.
It would dovetail an entire TEN FOOT length of stock in a single operation,
with all the tails cut _simultaneously_. Had something like 100 cutter heads.
*SCARY* machine.
Randy Chapman <[email protected]> wrote:
: http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2579938883
: I don't get it, to be honest. What on earth would you use such a
: monstrosity for? Jointing an entire tabletop at once? But how would you
: thickness plane it afterwards?
: I don't think I care to even guess how much that weighs. Nor how he lost or
: broke it.
Hard thing to lose!
The other odd thing about this machine is it looks lik the outfeed table is
about half the length of the infeed table. Seems like it should be the
other way round.
-- Andy Barss
On Mon, 15 Dec 2003 22:27:37 GMT, "Randy Chapman"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>But how would you
>thickness plane it afterwards?
You should see the planer the seller is keeping...<g>
--
Kenneth
If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS."
R -
I think someone already posted this, and apparently, beasties such as this
were used to joint framing timbers for wooden ships prior to planing. So,
yes, if you had a 30' beam 14" wide, this woul just be the ticket. Don't
ask me how you'd move that timber. I'm thinking it would take more than a
Grizzly 1/2 stock feeder....
John
"Randy Chapman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:szqDb.562383$Fm2.527285@attbi_s04...
>
> http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2579938883
>
> I don't get it, to be honest. What on earth would you use such a
> monstrosity for? Jointing an entire tabletop at once? But how would you
> thickness plane it afterwards?
>
> I don't think I care to even guess how much that weighs. Nor how he lost
or
> broke it.
>
> --randy
>
>