Powermatic 201 22-inch Surface Planer
From Artisans Asylum Wiki
22-inch Surface Planer | |
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General Info | |
Make | Powermatic |
Model | 201 |
Serial | Unknown |
Specs | |
Manual | 201 Planer User Manual |
Asylum Info | |
Location | Wood Shop |
Rubric | |
Training | |
Testing | |
Restrictions | red |
This is a RED tool. Training and tool-testing are required.
Eye protection required! | ||
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Description
The 22-inch planer in the Wood Shop is nicknamed The Beast. It has a large powerful horizontal cutter similar to that in the jointer contained within a sturdy housing. Rollers inside the housing grasp the workpiece and feed it at a steady rate under the cutter to grind off or "plane" the top surface of the piece. Because this machine is so powerful, careful precautions must be taken in its use.
Use For
- Hardwood Boards
- Lengthwise grain
- Length > 10 inches
- Thickness > 3/8"
Do Not Use For
- Pine or Fir or other pitchy wood
- Construction or reclaimed lumber
- Stuff with nails in it.
- Wood with knots, uneven, cross-grain or end-grain
- Particle board, laminates, or other composites.
- Boards without a flat surface on at least one side.
Use the Jointer to flatten one side before planing
- Plastics, metals
- Anything stupid.
Safety Notes
- Wear safety goggles. Eyeglasses are NOT safety goggles.
- This machine is LOUD. Wear hearing protection.
- No loose clothing, neckties, rings, or other jewelry. Roll up sleeves. Wear shoes with good traction. Do not wear gloves.
- Switch on the dust collector before feeding stock into the machine. It is a Coral AF/2C two-filter collector shared with the Powermatic 1696 Jointer.
- Keep safety guards in place at all times when the machine is in use.
- Do not push the workpiece into the machine.
- Do not take a depth of cut greater than 1/16 inch. This is one full turn on the adjustment wheel.
- If the machine is damaged, place a RED tag on it explaining the problem. Do not attempt to fix it yourself.
Maintenance Request Tag. |
- Maintain a balanced stance at all times so that you do not fall or lean against moving parts. Do not overreach or use excessive force to perform any machine operation.
- Do not feed stacked boards. They can kick back.
- Do not plane a board with loose knots or with nails or any foreign material on its surface.
- Twisted, warped, or wind-in stock should first be jointed on one surface before attempting to plane a parallel surface on the planer. Serious stock flaws cannot be removed by use of a planer alone.
- Keep hands outside of the machine. Never reach under the guards to try to clear stock that has stopped feeding.
- When starting a cut, do not have any part of the hands under that part of the board that is over the table; the infeed roller will engage the board and force it down against the table causing a pinching action.
- Never leave the machine running unattended.
Cross-section of the machine. |
To interpret the results of test cuts, see pp. 16-21 of the 201 Planer User Manual.