Question
I have accurately set knives in a number of jointers and know all the basic moves. This one, though, is something else again. The jointer is an L Power manufactured in the 1920s. Has a round, ball bearing head (original) that takes 3 knives of 16" width. Each knife is held in place by 4 gibs. The side facing the knife is machined on an angle, essentially creating a wedge which progressively tightens against the knife as the capscrews, which are inclined at right angles to the cutterhead, are tightened down and drive the wedge up. I am changing the knives one at a time and began by pulling the old one, cleaning the gibs in solvent and blowing dry and cleaning the area of the head that receives the knife.
After about 5 hours, I am still on knife number one and have observed a couple of things along the way. One is that the design of the gibs is such that the knife can jump up as much as 0.015" during tightening. I tried to allow for this in the basic height set up with the jackscrews, but the amount the knife is raised by tightening isn't consistent from one end to the other. In addition to that, the one time I was able to get the extreme ends of the knife within 0.001", the measurement in the center was 0.005" low. Originally I thought I might be measuring incorrectly (was indexing off the table) but got essentially the same result with a half moon type jig that indexes directly off the cutterhead. At this point I can't rule anything in or out. Knives were poorly set when I purchased the machine. Any insights appreciated. I'm about out.
Forum Responses
(Solid Wood Machining Forum)
From contributor J:
Afraid I don't have much help for you. One thing is if the knives consistently jump upwards, could you use a block as a firm stop at the top?
If I'm understanding correctly it's similar to the Euro block shaper heads right? You tighten a screw downwards which pushes the wedge upwards? A good design for knives pinned into place, but I could see it being less than desirable for a floating jointer knife. I would also recommend checking in with the guys as OWWM.
Put the knives in a bit high and put some tension on the gib screws. Take a piece of maple maybe 1" square and 5" long and a small hammer to tap the maple block on the edge of the knife to lower it down. I typically get it to .005 before the final tap down to 0". Use the end grain to the block. Don't put so much tension you can't tap the knife down without splitting the maple tap adjuster. You should then be able to tighten the knives with no movement. I can work off the outfeed table off the head with a straddle type indicator base and easily get the knives within .0005". I just did a 20" 4 knife jointer today in a leisurely 45 minutes.
The inclined table adjusters found on Crescent jointers are better than parallelogram tables. Easy to adjust but you need a straight edge 2/3's the length of the overall jointer. Also an indicator to reference off the cutter. Every movement of an incline will make the opposite corner move the other way. When you think you are done, turn the height adjuster crank to run the table down all the way and run it up, then recheck. If it stays coplanar, you are done. If not you should be closer, then adjust some more.
I've had every issue you can imagine with jointers.
Did you understand the knife info? The only reason to get new knives is for a spare set or if they have been sharpened too many times. A slight crown is minor and can be dealt with. Have you asked your sharpening service to straighten them out? I've seen guys struggle with this for years but no one asks the sharpening service this question.
I had an earlier 1895 -1900s L. Powers 20" jointer with a square head and slot knives and sold it because of stories of the cutters coming loose. I know a guy who has all slot notched type blade machines and he uses new hardened bolts, nuts with spiny washers, some locktite and a torque wrench.
I kept the 20" slot blades because the buyer adapted a spiral head into it.