shaper molding head help requested. - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: shaper molding head help requested. (/showthread.php?tid=7325648) |
shaper molding head help requested. - bridger - 11-28-2016 Quote:I have a delta HD shaper. the HD stands for Heavy Duty, which I guess it is, for a home shop machine. it sports a 1HP repulsion/induction motor, which if my calculations are correct is pullied to spin the spindle at about 9000RPM. I just ordered a power feeder for it, and am considering investing in a cutterhead which accepts replaceable knives. the sort of thing I'm looking at are like: RE: shaper molding head help requested. - JGrout - 11-28-2016 used tooling when it appears is rarely cheap; do not get your hopes up You are probably as well off with the griz head mainly because your 1 hp shaper is going to be underpowered for single pass cuts 3" high even with a power feeder. The steel head is heavier and robs power you do not have to spare.. Also you do not need a 1" spindle for the griz head you need bushings from 1" to 3/4" to fill the spindle. I generally have T bushings top and bottom and fillers through the remainder of the bore. T bushings reduction bushings Are the knife corrugations interchangeable? I believe so, but before I bought from a different source than the head I would verify with the supplier that just to be sure Joe RE: shaper molding head help requested. - Steve N - 11-28-2016 (11-28-2016, 01:33 PM)JGrout Wrote: your 1 hp shaper is going to be underpowered for single pass cuts 3" high even with a power feeder. Gospel You are looking at a head for a 3HP shaper in any reality. Partial thickness may be hard to do full height. That will be a lot of drag, and on a 1hp machine it won't = longevity. Multi pass you could run it, but for how long? Even if it's not a griz machine you are looking at, it is a Griz head. Call their customer service, and ask them about that chunk on a 1 hp machine. On their ad it's not shown as an accessory on the 1 1/2, but it is on the 3 Hp machine RE: shaper molding head help requested. - JGrout - 11-28-2016 We set one up on a 3 hp Seco shaper and it worked mostly I did not like the power transmission on that unit the belt was too small in section and would just spin out if the cut was too deep Using the same head on a 3 hp 2 speed Delta worked better though at 7K RPM. I imagine the CMT unit would work OK if you did not get greedy with the depth of cut. RE: shaper molding head help requested. - MKepke - 11-30-2016 Just LIL.. ..assuming this shaper is for hobby use, I wouldn't bother with a molding head with replaceable HSS knives unless I knew I had upcoming projects with lots of different profiles. Entry-level dedicated carbide shaper cutters are a few $ more than an individual set of HSS knives, but if you only need one or to profiles right now the dedicated cutters get you more cutting edges, chip-limiting designs and carbide edge-retention. Full disclosure: I have lots of HSS molding knives for my molder/planer and I use very, very few. -Mark RE: shaper molding head help requested. - Gentleman Jim - 11-30-2016 Delta made a molding head for the HD shaper that uses the same knives as the table saw molding head. You can reprint straight knives to a custom profile. This is a very cost effective alternative. RE: shaper molding head help requested. - RonB1957 - 12-06-2016 I may be the odd ball here, but I had a 5hp delta for several years. Never used a power feeder. Cabinet doors and such. When it came to mouldings I tried the Griz. corrugated head and didn't like it. I actually preferred the CMT or Amana. Quicker set up, etc. The profiles are plenty and you can still get custom made knives made. I had mine made from M4 steel. Silky smooth cut on cherry end grain. Ultimately after some time I just went with a little shop fox moulder. Williams and Hussey look a like. Much better alternative in the long run. It sits a lot these days, but when I need short runs of moulding, it is nice to have. Oh, and the knives can be custom made as well for not much more than the shaper. Ultimately both the shaper and moulder have their pros and cons. Best wishes. |