The bed on these, the bit directly under the cutter, is thin piece of sheet metal resting on the structure. If the wood passing over the bed has any unevenness, i.e. it hasn't been planed flat as it passes thru the machine the thin bed can lift/flex and then 'slap' back down. Worse with narrow...
I'd hazard a guess that it happened sometime after/during the first industrial revolution. But before the industrialisation of furniture making. Large numbers of people moving into expanding towns and cities to work in the mills. The skilled makers couldn't meet the demand for chairs and other...
Agree with the above as a solution given the situation, though clearly all the hard work put into restoring the floors is lost. A couple of alternatives to ponder are, firstly you could use some laminate floor silicone sealant to fill the gaps. It is available in a range of colours/shades and...
Have a look at Curtis Buchannan's video quite brief and only that one side needs to be done as the other side just follows. Though you may also want to make one of the other reamers he shows which are easier to sharpen imo.
Silhouettes from thinner pieces? - animals, country outlines, interests of family/friends etc, lots of artwork available on the net. Mount them on plinths and give as gifts.
Perhaps a search for 'mobile' or 'modular workbench' may be useful something along these lines may be more useful as a workbench / storage unit in this situation. With part / most of it? of it as an mft top it could be used to help build out the rest of the space.
You could use moisture...
use this (or similar) to make a bookcase oak so you can get on and build.
get a moisture meter and a digital thermometer with a humidity readout, buy a few of pieces of solid timber locally. The wood in your home will be <6% and much less in the warmer rooms, compare to the bought timber, store...
Marius Hornberger(?) on youtbe put a spiral head into a 636 years ago and had to disassemble the cutter block assembly. Can't exactly remember how much he showed, there be more in the comments, but I do remember he said it wasn't easy, but he did get it done.
Have had the evolution r255 for about 3yrs. It's used everyday and has cut a lot of timber, mostly hardwood, with no issues. The bevel guide and positives stops for angles treat as a guide only, it can be set accurately just takes a little time and that's one of the differences between it and...
From memory the non-oem tyres where blue urethane and thicker than oem. That made the blade difficult to fit and very hard to track. There was one point on the tilt mechanism where the blade would run with the teeth off the front edge on both wheels. Literally an 1/8th of a turn one way or the...
'Struggle' is a wrong take, both would cut 70mm hardwood, just wouldn't want to personally cut 10 or 20 long lengths in a row on one.
It causes less fatigue on you, using a more powerful saw, which is the point I was making and clearly should have said. The scheppach I've seen advertised at...