Jump to content

Recommended Posts

  • Members
Posted

Hi,

         I had some rough cut Alabama Red Oak, and decided to take a board of it and make a real adjustable stitching pony.

It will adjust 2 ways and seems to work well.

Not really a wood worker but it came out pretty good I think!

No plans just looked at pics and went for it!

aaa1.jpg

aaa2.jpg

  • Members
Posted

Great work, especially considering you don't do wood work!  You'll get some use out of that for sure.  (but where did those metal coffee cans come from....)

YinTx

  • Members
Posted
Just now, seagiant said:

Hi,

         Thanks, the cans are probably 25 years old?

heh, my dad, in his 80's, has some, but I don't claim to have any...

again, cool pony, have you gotten to try it out yet?

YinTx

  • Members
Posted

Hi,

          No just finished it.

Admittedly it was more work than I thought going in, but?

Holds leather well and stays were you set it with the knobs.

Hoping if I use it angled forward a little, it will keep the thread from catching on anything.

  • Members
Posted

Great looking project. 
The oak really looks good with a lot of texture and colors.

The belt in the picture looks really fine too.

  • Contributing Member
Posted

May I suggest you line the jaws with thin leather. It will help grip and prevent the jaws marking the leather project

  • Members
Posted

Hi,

         Thanks fella's!

I thought about leather on the jaws but, I sandwiched sandpaper between the jaws...

And, worked it, so the jaws are fit to each other pretty well, meaning, they hold the leather with equal force.

This keeps anything from being marked!

I had an old 80"s  small Craftsman Router Table to round the edges which helped and a old Craftsman 50's table saw.

Not really, state of the art, but solid tools made when we actually produced quality in this Country!

I'm going to make a sheath for my head knife to try it out!

  • Members
Posted
On 2/10/2021 at 8:08 AM, seagiant said:

Not really, state of the art, but solid tools made when we actually produced quality in this Country!

I can't agree more, especially I look at some of the stuff at Harbor Freight.  That said, for a hobbyist like myself, I have a sander and a grinder from Harbor Freight and am considering an arbor press; forking over a bunch of money for something I won't use very much is me being pragmatic.    But I do have an eye out for some equipment at estate/garage sales but boy, they go fast and the sellers are still proud of 'em $$.  Quality does hold up it's pricing! 

  • CFM
Posted
On 2/10/2021 at 7:08 AM, seagiant said:

d a old Craftsman 50's table saw.

The first real shop tool, for wood, I ever owned bought it for 100 bucks about 10 year ago. I love that thing it is an animal compared to modern junk. Most of my wood work had been by hand tools also. 

Your pony looks great!! 

  • Members
Posted

Totally agree on the older machinery.  Unless you spend serious money the new stuff doesn't come close.  Great job on the pony!  I'm thinking about a better one for myself too.

  • Members
Posted

Hi,

        Thanks, Gentlemen!

Here is a pic of the old 10" Craftsman, it is such a solid machine, I bought a Delta T2 Fence for it.

Only has a 1 HP motor, but with a thin kerf blade does what I need, if I take it easy.

The 14" Planer is a RYOBI (made in Japan) 80"s model, but still works great and I can sharpen the blades myself.

I'm now rebuilding a, 50's Delta 6" Jointer, so have a few tools to do projects with.

That Bama, Red Oak, is so solid and hard, you need tools that will work it!

gyuuiiii.JPG

4.jpg

  • CFM
Posted

those old craftsmans were built to add an accessory jointer i would love to find one of those somewhere. 

 

  • Members
Posted

Hi,

          This, is like the Jointer I'm rebuilding.

I did want a vintage Delta Uni-saw, table saw, but the Craftsman was so close to it anyway...

Just upgraded the fence and was done.

Everyone wanted a lot of $$$ for their Uni-saws anyway!

jointer.jpeg

  • CFM
Posted
4 hours ago, seagiant said:

Hi,

          This, is like the Jointer I'm rebuilding.

I did want a vintage Delta Uni-saw, table saw, but the Craftsman was so close to it anyway...

Just upgraded the fence and was done.

Everyone wanted a lot of $$$ for their Uni-saws anyway!

jointer.jpeg

sweet indeed!

 

  • Members
Posted

Are you on OWWM too?  

  • Members
Posted

Hi

          I go there to get info on old machines or PDF copys of owners manuals.

I now have the Delta 6" Jointer apart and I'm cleaning and painting.

Replacing the old original bearings (New Departure) with new ones in the cutter head.

I have a 1 HP motor to run it which will be plenty.

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...