I have a vintage 12 inch band saw made by Shopmaster in Minneapolis
that was made back in the 40's or 50's. Long since out of business.
My
grandfather owned the saw. He powered it with a 1/4 horse power
motor.
For most uses the 1/4 horse worked OK, but all the smoke that was
stored
it in escaped recently when I was resawing some lace wood to make
some veneer for a jewelry box I'm making. Surprisingly, the motor
still
works even after all the smoke escaped. I plan to replace the
motor.
How much horsepower is typical for this size band saw? The blade is
an odd length of 78 inches.
Second question. What's a good finish that will pop the grain of the
lace wood?
On Apr 29, 9:39 am, SteveC <[email protected]> wrote:
> I have a vintage 12 inch band saw made by Shopmaster in Minneapolis
> that was made back in the 40's or 50's. Long since out of business.
> My
> grandfather owned the saw. He powered it with a 1/4 horse power
> motor.
> For most uses the 1/4 horse worked OK, but all the smoke that was
> stored
> it in escaped recently when I was resawing some lace wood to make
> some veneer for a jewelry box I'm making. Surprisingly, the motor
> still
> works even after all the smoke escaped. I plan to replace the
> motor.
> How much horsepower is typical for this size band saw? The blade is
> an odd length of 78 inches.
One option is replace the smoke seals.
If the mounts can deal with it, a 1/2 HP would be a bit of an
upgrade.
> Second question. What's a good finish that will pop the grain of the
> lace wood?
Don't ask me.. I do everything with water based lacquer. Benjamin
Moore makes a great acrylic clear lacquer. That stuff pops all the
grain I ever want to enhance.
The Minwax products in the same class are supposed to be pretty good
too.
Maybe not the right answer as I spray everything.
A lot of the illustrious gentlemen here like wipe-on poly, shellac and
tung oils.
You may have started a 250 entry thread here..<G> good on ya!
r
"SteveC" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I have a vintage 12 inch band saw made by Shopmaster in Minneapolis
> that was made back in the 40's or 50's. Long since out of business.
> My
> grandfather owned the saw. He powered it with a 1/4 horse power
> motor.
> For most uses the 1/4 horse worked OK, but all the smoke that was
> stored
> it in escaped recently when I was resawing some lace wood to make
> some veneer for a jewelry box I'm making. Surprisingly, the motor
> still
> works even after all the smoke escaped. I plan to replace the
> motor.
> How much horsepower is typical for this size band saw? The blade is
> an odd length of 78 inches.
>
> Second question. What's a good finish that will pop the grain of the
> lace wood?
>
Typical, or what HP should you use?! As much that will fit in the saw!
Seriously, I have a 1-1/2 HP motor on my Crapsman bandsaw and it really woke
up the saw. It may be a bit overkill, but I had the motor laying around so
I used it. For practical purposes, about 1 HP would be great as long as the
saw is rigid enough to handle it.
Greg
"Robatoy" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> One option is replace the smoke seals.
Yeah but replacement smoke is almost as expensice as buying a new motor.
Not totally unlike buying a new drill "kit" vs. just buying 2 new batteries.