MR

"Mike Richardson"

10/06/2004 7:59 AM

Unisaw - Impressions

Ok, a few impressions of my Australian delivered Unisaw...

Clearly marked REWIRED 220/50, and no red dot. Good start.
All bits there.
Went together with no trouble.

Issues?

Adjustment for splitter mount does not have enough travel to align splitter
with Delta supplied blade, have to fiddle with different thickness washers -
seems silly when there are adjustment points...need to look harder maybe.

Why is it rewired for Australia, and yet has not got an Australian plug
fitted? Had to get a 20 amp plug end and attach. Minor but irritating.

Blade is worse than the worst hand held saw blade I have ever used. No -
actually - it is worse than that - I have never seen such bad blade marking.
More $$ soon, sigh.

Even on dedicated 20 amp circuit, browns out the house lights when starting.

BIG kick when starting, but once running is QUIET and SMOOTH. (Would be
even better with a good blade mebbe).

Tried my tenoning jig on quite a few tenons, and although only pine
(shaddup), everything went smoothly, mitre slot alignment to blade was spot
on from box, and although my metric allen keys do not suit the Biesemeyer
adjuster, a sliver of plastic gets it square for now....lol.

Hooked up the Winch on my four wheel drive to the Uni motor, and the Uni
won.

So far? Very happy. Will post in a year or so after I have flogged
it...and update you all..

Mike R.
Brisbane, Australia


This topic has 5 replies

Tn

"TOM"

in reply to "Mike Richardson" on 10/06/2004 7:59 AM

10/06/2004 1:10 PM


"Mike Richardson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Ok, a few impressions of my Australian delivered Unisaw...
>
> Clearly marked REWIRED 220/50, and no red dot. Good start.
> All bits there.
> Went together with no trouble.
>
> Issues?
>
> Adjustment for splitter mount does not have enough travel to align
splitter
> with Delta supplied blade, have to fiddle with different thickness
washers -
> seems silly when there are adjustment points...need to look harder maybe.
>

My unisaw was delivered with the splitter mounting bracket aligned for a
narrow kerf blade. The supplied Delta blade has the typical carbide teeth
wider
than the blade kerf, and I had to move the mounting bracket about 0.030" to
align the right side of the splitter with the carbide bit. This also matches
my
Freud Dado blade and probably most other carbide blades. The slight
realignment required using hex-head wrenches (Allen wrenches) to move it.

Any possibility you have the splitter washer on the wrong side of the
splitter?



> Why is it rewired for Australia, and yet has not got an Australian plug
> fitted? Had to get a 20 amp plug end and attach. Minor but irritating.
>
> Blade is worse than the worst hand held saw blade I have ever used. No -
> actually - it is worse than that - I have never seen such bad blade
marking.
> More $$ soon, sigh.
>

The one supplied by Delta for my saw is very good. It's a10" x 50 tooth
ATB&R. Smooth cuts and no tearout even on 1/4" plywood.


> Even on dedicated 20 amp circuit, browns out the house lights when
starting.
>
> BIG kick when starting, but once running is QUIET and SMOOTH. (Would be
> even better with a good blade mebbe).
>

I get no brown-outs on startup, but at 60 Hz the motor may be better
behaved.
The US version comes with a 15-amp plug, and it is rated to draw 11.9 Amps,
but it idles way below that. Mine is also smooth - standing a US nickel on
edge
on the table while it's running does not cause the coin to fall over from
vibration.


> Tried my tenoning jig on quite a few tenons, and although only pine
> (shaddup), everything went smoothly, mitre slot alignment to blade was
spot
> on from box, and although my metric allen keys do not suit the Biesemeyer
> adjuster, a sliver of plastic gets it square for now....lol.
>
> Hooked up the Winch on my four wheel drive to the Uni motor, and the Uni
> won.
>
> So far? Very happy. Will post in a year or so after I have flogged
> it...and update you all..
>
> Mike R.
> Brisbane, Australia
>
>


Good luck with yours - have enjoyed using mine.

-- Tom


BE

Brian Elfert

in reply to "Mike Richardson" on 10/06/2004 7:59 AM

10/06/2004 2:06 PM

"Mike Richardson" <[email protected]> writes:

>Why is it rewired for Australia, and yet has not got an Australian plug
>fitted? Had to get a 20 amp plug end and attach. Minor but irritating.

Is there a standard for a 20 amp 220V plug in Australia? In the USA,
there are about three or four different plugs that could be used. I
replaced the plug on mine with a locking plug.

>Blade is worse than the worst hand held saw blade I have ever used. No -
>actually - it is worse than that - I have never seen such bad blade marking.
>More $$ soon, sigh.

The blade on my Unisaw is really bad. I bought a remanufactured saw with
a 1999 serial number. It has a plain steel blade, no carbide or anything.

>Even on dedicated 20 amp circuit, browns out the house lights when starting.

Not unusual in most houses, especially with older wiring.

Brian Elfert

MR

"Mike Richardson"

in reply to "Mike Richardson" on 10/06/2004 7:59 AM

11/06/2004 12:04 PM

snip

> Any possibility you have the splitter washer on the wrong side of the
> splitter?
>
>

Mebbe....it is on same side as bolt head? So Head, Washer Splitter,
bracket.

I used the hex head adjusters to pull it over as far as possible already.

snip

>
> Good luck with yours - have enjoyed using mine.
>
> -- Tom
>
>

Thanks, am having fun already.
Mike

Gn

"Gary"

in reply to "Mike Richardson" on 10/06/2004 7:59 AM

10/06/2004 9:46 AM

As a newbie, I'm not certain my new Unisaw is perfect or not, but it seems
to be ok. The only problems I've encountered were the threads on the
flathead screws that hold the Biesemeyer fence front rail were so burred I
couldn't use them. after three weeks and as many phone calls, Bessemer
express shipped me replacements along with a full bag of hardware.

Also the instructions referred to a Z bracket and an L bracket that supports
the center of the extension table which was not included with my saw. I
was told by Biesmeyer that they only send those when the customer asks for
them.

Finally, the table top could be a lot smoother. Seems Delta has forgone
grinding the surface and leaving the rough milled finish. Does this rough
surface serve any purpose? Seems to me that all it does is make removal of
the furiture polish a lot more difficult. My Powermatic Bandsaw table has a
nice smooth finish.

Gary

MR

"Mike Richardson"

in reply to "Mike Richardson" on 10/06/2004 7:59 AM

11/06/2004 12:06 PM

> Is there a standard for a 20 amp 220V plug in Australia? In the USA,
> there are about three or four different plugs that could be used. I
> replaced the plug on mine with a locking plug.
>

Yes as far as I understand - all three pins fatter blade style. (15 amp is
only fatter earth poin blade)
>
> Not unusual in most houses, especially with older wiring.
>
> Brian Elfert

May worry the 5 computers in the house tho - hehe

Mike


You’ve reached the end of replies