I have taken on the project for a friend to modify his hammond to accept a dado stack.
To accomplish this task, I am going to make an entirely new arbor to hold the blades, but still use the original bearing block set-up. The new arbor will slip through the bearings just like the original.
The first design quetsion that I put to the forum is the debate of threading the saw arbor. i do not think I am man enough to cut the acme threads that my unisaw uses. so the debate is between national fine and national coarse. Any thoughts? these will of course be left hand threads. any worries of using regular threads?
Pete
Modifying a Hammond to accept a Dado stack
Moderator: crzypete
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Hello Crzypete,
I once had an old table saw that needed a new shaft. And I was also concernred a about my manliness with the acme thread and was all set to cut standard threads. But a table saw needs acme threads...... The reaseon is to support the blade. Acme threads are flat on the top, which give surface area for the blade. A standard thread will have "V" on the top that will get knocked down during blade changes. They are also not very supportive. A dato stack makes it even worse. With the multiple thin dato blades, they will not be supported and may run out of center. You have to be a man, and step up to the acme. When I cut the threads, the ony real hard part is grinding the bit to the exact profile. It took me a while. How about getting a acme carbide insert?? that you make life easy. Good luck.
I once had an old table saw that needed a new shaft. And I was also concernred a about my manliness with the acme thread and was all set to cut standard threads. But a table saw needs acme threads...... The reaseon is to support the blade. Acme threads are flat on the top, which give surface area for the blade. A standard thread will have "V" on the top that will get knocked down during blade changes. They are also not very supportive. A dato stack makes it even worse. With the multiple thin dato blades, they will not be supported and may run out of center. You have to be a man, and step up to the acme. When I cut the threads, the ony real hard part is grinding the bit to the exact profile. It took me a while. How about getting a acme carbide insert?? that you make life easy. Good luck.
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Hello everyone,
I'm new to the group and not sure if I need to do an intro, but will here. I've been a tool maker since the mid eighties and a tool designer for the past fifteen.
I've found a G-4B that I considering purchasing and would like to modify it to accept a dado stack. My questions are: How did you modify the table to accept the dado stack, and secondly, is a table insert used when a regular saw blade is in use.
Thanks,
Mike
I'm new to the group and not sure if I need to do an intro, but will here. I've been a tool maker since the mid eighties and a tool designer for the past fifteen.
I've found a G-4B that I considering purchasing and would like to modify it to accept a dado stack. My questions are: How did you modify the table to accept the dado stack, and secondly, is a table insert used when a regular saw blade is in use.
Thanks,
Mike
Hi Mike,
Welcome to the forum!
When I Did this modification, it was for a friend. He modified the table. So I don;t actually have pics.
The thing of note, is that we intended the dado stack to be entirely to the right of the rolling table, so only the small table on the right rear was altered. There is enough room to do this on the argo by eliminating the section that is intended to hold the steel cutters for trimming type.
As to making a wooden insert, that sounds like a great idea. It would be easy enough to step the dado stack hole.
I would definitely not want a hole there while using a regular blade..
Keep us posted of your project, Id love to see pics.
Pete
Welcome to the forum!
When I Did this modification, it was for a friend. He modified the table. So I don;t actually have pics.
The thing of note, is that we intended the dado stack to be entirely to the right of the rolling table, so only the small table on the right rear was altered. There is enough room to do this on the argo by eliminating the section that is intended to hold the steel cutters for trimming type.
As to making a wooden insert, that sounds like a great idea. It would be easy enough to step the dado stack hole.
I would definitely not want a hole there while using a regular blade..
Keep us posted of your project, Id love to see pics.
Pete
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