heimlaga
Established Member
A friend has died and his family wants to get rid of his old Waco five head planer. It is a flat belt driven machine from the early 50-ies. Apparently little used. He bought it secondhand in the late 70-ies intending to set up a planing business but it ended up becoming a house painting business instead and the planer has sat unused in an old barn ever since. Both the upper heads are removable and can easily be shifted out with modern heads. The lower head is a fixed square head. There is a huge amount of tooling but all is square head. I will go and take a closer look at it as soon as I recover from this flue.
Anyway....... the question is whether or not to drag it home...... the distance is less than a kilometre so that is no problem. I have rebuilt heavy industrial machines in far worse condition in the past. I don't have access to enough electricity to run a 25kW motor which should be roughly what it needs. On the other hand I can run it off the power take off on my Massey-Ferguson 165 thanks to the oldfashioned drive system with jackshaft and flat belts. I get requests for custom planed mouldings and flooring and all sorts of stuff which I turn down and tell them to call the planing mill in the next village. However the owner of that business is already past 65 and will sooner or later retire. I cannot ever run a more modern five head planer with separate motors for lack of electricity.
The question is whether or not I should expand my part time joinery and wooden boat repair enterprise into planing.
Any thouhts?
Whatever I decide I do not have time to rebuild it at the moment nor room to set it up to run. The question is essentially whether I should save it from the smelters and try to get it under roof somewhere hoping for a less stressful future or whether I should let it go.
Anyway....... the question is whether or not to drag it home...... the distance is less than a kilometre so that is no problem. I have rebuilt heavy industrial machines in far worse condition in the past. I don't have access to enough electricity to run a 25kW motor which should be roughly what it needs. On the other hand I can run it off the power take off on my Massey-Ferguson 165 thanks to the oldfashioned drive system with jackshaft and flat belts. I get requests for custom planed mouldings and flooring and all sorts of stuff which I turn down and tell them to call the planing mill in the next village. However the owner of that business is already past 65 and will sooner or later retire. I cannot ever run a more modern five head planer with separate motors for lack of electricity.
The question is whether or not I should expand my part time joinery and wooden boat repair enterprise into planing.
Any thouhts?
Whatever I decide I do not have time to rebuild it at the moment nor room to set it up to run. The question is essentially whether I should save it from the smelters and try to get it under roof somewhere hoping for a less stressful future or whether I should let it go.