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Here ya go.
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Location: SW Pa.
That is a good looking machine for its age . I like the bench you built. If its solid...its a keeper. Add a shelf real low on it and add some weight, will make it even more solid.
If it can't kill you it probably ain't no good. Better living through chemicals.
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Location: S. E. Alabama, formally from Wisconsin.
I have that same jointer, and it will not need more weight. It does work great. I made a different stand, as the original was too tall for me.
S.E. Alabama, formerly from Wisconsin.
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Location: Columbia, SC
My father had a WT 6" jointer when I was a kid. I've used and owned a lot of jointers since those days, but I haven't found a better one.
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Location: New Jersey
Another, nice ol' arn from good old Plainfield NJ:
Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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Location: Texas
03-10-2019, 11:29 PM
(This post was last modified: 03-10-2019, 11:36 PM by daddo.)
When looking for bearings on an old machine (1950's USA made), I had to match with mm instead of inches to find the bearing. They fit perfect. You might convert your sizes to metric and redo the search by size instead of the number. There are sites that have the exact dimensions on every bearing that existed.
https://bearingsdirect.com/search?contro...mit_search=
http://www.timken.com/engineering-tools/bearing-search/
https://bearingfinder.ntnamericas.com/ad...lpver=1006