MJ

Mark & Juanita

12/05/2004 4:27 AM

Replacement for that Unit Saw


Tired of that Unit saw? Not enough power from a wimpy 3 HP motor?
10" not enough capacity? Is that what's bothering you, bunky? Well, take
a look at this, select your own motor capacity! Only $75! What a bargain!
What could be easier?

<http://www.tractorshed.com/cgi-bin/photoads/classifieds.cgi?search_and_display_db_button=on&db_id=68876&query=retrieval>

Guards? Who needs stinkin' guards?



No affiliation with the seller, this one just scared the bejeebers out of
me.


This topic has 12 replies

DM

"D. Mo"

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 6:55 PM

Ahh the memories. Just got rid of one like that a coupla years ago.
Powered mine off a JD Styled A 1955 vintage. Wish I still had the tractor.

D. Mo

"Mark & Juanita" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Tired of that Unit saw? Not enough power from a wimpy 3 HP motor?
> 10" not enough capacity? Is that what's bothering you, bunky? Well, take
> a look at this, select your own motor capacity! Only $75! What a bargain!
> What could be easier?
>
>
<http://www.tractorshed.com/cgi-bin/photoads/classifieds.cgi?search_and_disp
lay_db_button=on&db_id=68876&query=retrieval>
>
> Guards? Who needs stinkin' guards?
>
>
>
> No affiliation with the seller, this one just scared the bejeebers out
of
> me.

WS

Wes Stewart

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 7:31 AM

On Wed, 12 May 2004 04:27:57 GMT, Mark & Juanita
<[email protected]> wrote:

|
| Tired of that Unit saw? Not enough power from a wimpy 3 HP motor?
|10" not enough capacity? Is that what's bothering you, bunky? Well, take
|a look at this, select your own motor capacity! Only $75! What a bargain!
|What could be easier?
|
|<http://www.tractorshed.com/cgi-bin/photoads/classifieds.cgi?search_and_display_db_button=on&db_id=68876&query=retrieval>
|

When I was a boy our family had friends who owned a ranch in Southern
AZ (Sonoita) and I spent a lot of weekends and summers there.

I can remember cutting firewood with one of those. We didn't use a
tractor PTO, however; there was a (semi)dedicated gasoline engine
driving it. When not sawing wood, the engine drove a pump jack that
had replaced the windmill that supplied water to the house.

In addition to ranching the fellow was a well driller so he always had
a supply of dynamite. We got the wood to saw by blowing up scrub oak
trees. A half stick at the base of a dead tree and you almost don't
need the saw.

| Guards? Who needs stinkin' guards?

This woodworker doesn't:

http://www.badgersteamandgas.com/photos/99cg35a.jpg

fh

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 6:07 AM

Mark & Juanita <[email protected]> wrote in message news:<[email protected]>...
> Tired of that Unit saw? Not enough power from a wimpy 3 HP motor?
> 10" not enough capacity? Is that what's bothering you, bunky? Well, take
> a look at this, select your own motor capacity! Only $75! What a bargain!
> What could be easier?
>
> <http://www.tractorshed.com/cgi-bin/photoads/classifieds.cgi?search_and_display_db_button=on&db_id=68876&query=retrieval>
>
> Guards? Who needs stinkin' guards?
>
>

Hey if the put guards on it you couldn't see where the blade is in
order to avoid it!

hex

-30-

DM

"David Merrill"

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 2:37 PM

Back before electricity, oil, gas and coal for heat and cooking, that saw
rig is what rural America used to cut up the winter wood supply. As a
grammar and high school boy I used to help Dad and Mom cut up about ten
cords of wood a year on a rig similar to that. It was powered through a 12
foot center/center flat belt driven by a single cylinder engine with a huge
flywheel, reputed to have come from a railroad 'hand' car. The danger from
the blade was nothing compared to that of slipping that belt over the
rotating engine pulley. And sawing up the wood was fun compared to the
labor of cutting the logs, trucking them home, stacking them, wheelbarrowing
the cut wood around to the front of the house, tossing it through a hatch,
stacking it in the dirt floor cellar, carting it upstairs to the woodbox,
getting out of bed on a sub-zero winter morning to start the cook fire,
cleaning out the ashes, and cleaning the stove pipes and chimneys. Rural
Connecticut, circa 1950's. Houses with wood fireplaces/stoves fail to
enthuse me even to this day.

David Merrill


"Mark & Juanita" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Tired of that Unit saw? Not enough power from a wimpy 3 HP motor?
> 10" not enough capacity? Is that what's bothering you, bunky? Well, take
> a look at this, select your own motor capacity! Only $75! What a bargain!
> What could be easier?
>
>
<http://www.tractorshed.com/cgi-bin/photoads/classifieds.cgi?search_and_disp
lay_db_button=on&db_id=68876&query=retrieval>
>
> Guards? Who needs stinkin' guards?
>
>
>
> No affiliation with the seller, this one just scared the bejeebers out
of
> me.

TL

"Todd L"

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 9:40 AM

What't a Unit Saw?..............................

Tod L

"Mark & Juanita" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> Tired of that Unit saw? Not enough power from a wimpy 3 HP motor?
> 10" not enough capacity? Is that what's bothering you, bunky? Well, take
> a look at this, select your own motor capacity! Only $75! What a bargain!
> What could be easier?
>
>
<http://www.tractorshed.com/cgi-bin/photoads/classifieds.cgi?search_and_disp
lay_db_button=on&db_id=68876&query=retrieval>
>
> Guards? Who needs stinkin' guards?
>
>
>
> No affiliation with the seller, this one just scared the bejeebers out
of
> me.

RE

"R. E. Engerman"

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 11:33 PM


"Todd L" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> What't a Unit Saw?..............................
>
> Tod L

I guess that is my saw. I got it used from a neighbor and I though it was a
Unit saw. Turns out, the damned thing is a Uni_ Saw made by Delta. I
upgraded mine with a more powerful motor from my old Craftsman saw. I feel
silly now that I know it was not a Unit saw.

Ralph Engeman
R. E. Quick Transit

jj

jo4hn

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 11:35 PM

Todd L wrote:
> What't a Unit Saw?..............................
>
> Tod L

Mondegreen for a Unisaur?
j4

MJ

Mark & Juanita

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

13/05/2004 5:29 AM

On Wed, 12 May 2004 14:37:23 GMT, "David Merrill" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Back before electricity, oil, gas and coal for heat and cooking, that saw
>rig is what rural America used to cut up the winter wood supply. As a
>grammar and high school boy I used to help Dad and Mom cut up about ten
>cords of wood a year on a rig similar to that. It was powered through a 12
>foot center/center flat belt driven by a single cylinder engine with a huge
>flywheel, reputed to have come from a railroad 'hand' car. The danger from
>the blade was nothing compared to that of slipping that belt over the
>rotating engine pulley.

While it was running? :-O When I was really young, dad used a
belt-driven grinder to grind grain for the dairy cattle, but the tractors
all had clutch control such that you could hook up the belt, then engage
the pulley. Even that, with the long belt out in the open was pretty
sporting.

MJ

Mark & Juanita

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

13/05/2004 5:26 AM

On Wed, 12 May 2004 23:33:05 GMT, "R. E. Engerman" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>
>"Todd L" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> What't a Unit Saw?..............................
>>
>> Tod L
>
>I guess that is my saw. I got it used from a neighbor and I though it was a
>Unit saw. Turns out, the damned thing is a Uni_ Saw made by Delta. I
>upgraded mine with a more powerful motor from my old Craftsman saw. I feel
>silly now that I know it was not a Unit saw.
>
>Ralph Engeman
>R. E. Quick Transit
>

Thanks Ralph, thought I was gonna hafta 'splain it myself and I knew I
couldn't do half as good as your explanation. :-)

b

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

12/05/2004 9:20 AM

On Wed, 12 May 2004 14:37:23 GMT, "David Merrill"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Back before electricity, oil, gas and coal for heat and cooking, that saw
>rig is what rural America used to cut up the winter wood supply. As a
>grammar and high school boy I used to help Dad and Mom cut up about ten
>cords of wood a year on a rig similar to that. It was powered through a 12
>foot center/center flat belt driven by a single cylinder engine with a huge
>flywheel, reputed to have come from a railroad 'hand' car. The danger from
>the blade was nothing compared to that of slipping that belt over the
>rotating engine pulley. And sawing up the wood was fun compared to the
>labor of cutting the logs, trucking them home, stacking them, wheelbarrowing
>the cut wood around to the front of the house, tossing it through a hatch,
>stacking it in the dirt floor cellar, carting it upstairs to the woodbox,
>getting out of bed on a sub-zero winter morning to start the cook fire,
>cleaning out the ashes, and cleaning the stove pipes and chimneys. Rural
>Connecticut, circa 1950's. Houses with wood fireplaces/stoves fail to
>enthuse me even to this day.
>
>David Merrill


.....and it was uphill both ways, too.......

DM

"David Merrill"

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

13/05/2004 3:26 PM

Yes, while it was running. The engine was started by turning over the
flywheel by hand. When it warmed sufficiently to run smoothly the belt,
loosely looped over the saw frame's outboard pulley, was eased over the top
of the engine's rotating pulley until friction caught it and the saw was
spun up. One person placed a log on the saw frame and pivoted it into the
(30" IIRC) blade while a second person supported the protruding,
stove-length section and took it away upon completion of the cut.

David Merrill

"Mark & Juanita" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Wed, 12 May 2004 14:37:23 GMT, "David Merrill"
<[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >Back before electricity, oil, gas and coal for heat and cooking, that saw
> >rig is what rural America used to cut up the winter wood supply. As a
> >grammar and high school boy I used to help Dad and Mom cut up about ten
> >cords of wood a year on a rig similar to that. It was powered through a
12
> >foot center/center flat belt driven by a single cylinder engine with a
huge
> >flywheel, reputed to have come from a railroad 'hand' car. The danger
from
> >the blade was nothing compared to that of slipping that belt over the
> >rotating engine pulley.
>
> While it was running? :-O When I was really young, dad used a
> belt-driven grinder to grind grain for the dairy cattle, but the tractors
> all had clutch control such that you could hook up the belt, then engage
> the pulley. Even that, with the long belt out in the open was pretty
> sporting.
>
>

TL

"Todd L"

in reply to Mark & Juanita on 12/05/2004 4:27 AM

13/05/2004 8:42 AM

Golly gee, thanks so much. I would have NEVER guessed that was meant to say
'Unisaw'. I can sleep at night now :)

Todd L

"R. E. Engerman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "Todd L" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > What't a Unit Saw?..............................
> >
> > Tod L
>
> I guess that is my saw. I got it used from a neighbor and I though it was
a
> Unit saw. Turns out, the damned thing is a Uni_ Saw made by Delta. I
> upgraded mine with a more powerful motor from my old Craftsman saw. I
feel
> silly now that I know it was not a Unit saw.
>
> Ralph Engeman
> R. E. Quick Transit
>
>


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