Finally found some Festo stuff.

Darcy,

I really have to give you a big "Atta Boy!"  I know that at times we haven't always seen eye to eye, but your efforts and skills at bringing these machines back to life and the enthusiasm you have shown is mind boggling.  Fabulous job!  I honestly believe that they will serve you well in respect of the respect and care and hard work you have put into them.

Well done Dude!

Peter
 
It is making chips.  Little more tuning and I will get a video up so everyone can see what it does and how it does it.

 
Sweet!!!  Thanks for posting thi, Darcy!  What an awesome piece of equipment.  I guess this could be the Domino XXL  ;D!

Scot
 
Darcy, great work.  Very cool to see.

I was just lucky enough to tour TTS' facilities in Germany.  In the museum there were maybe about 20 pieces of Festool, Festool, Stoll and Fezer equipment.  Many machines similar to yours and many not.  Really cool to see you restore one.
 
Sean Ackerman said:
Darcy, great work.  Very cool to see.

I was just lucky enough to tour TTS' facilities in Germany.  In the museum there were maybe about 20 pieces of Festool, Festool, Stoll and Fezer equipment.  Many machines similar to yours and many not.  Really cool to see you restore one.

Well where the heck are the pictures?
 
Michael Kellough said:
That's a very effective tool! And it looks great now, well done.

What is the maximum depth of cut? Can it be done in one stroke or does the table have to be lifted?

It can do a 6" deep mortise.

I would like to make the missing (optional) foot for it.  A rod threads into the bottom of the table and goes all the way down to the base and has an adjustable foot/rest on it, for mortising really tall parts.
 
That thing is awesome! 

I was checking out some of your other vintage machine youtube videos, seriously cool stuff.  Do you use them or restore them to sell? 
 
Vindingo said:
That thing is awesome! 

I was checking out some of your other vintage machine youtube videos, seriously cool stuff.  Do you use them or restore them to sell? 

I buy and sell quite a bit of old machinery and parts.  I usually only restore the one's I really want to keep. 

It is a money loosing proposition (most of the time) to strip one down, go through it, put it back together and then sell it.

Sometimes I will part with a loved one, if the price is right.

I don't want to spill the beans on what this one ended up costing me. [cool]
 
WarnerConstCo. said:
I don't want to spill the beans on what this one ended up costing me. [cool]

I respect your desire for quietness, but was this a positive or negative experience in your mind monetarily?\

I think it is great that you can do and are doing this!

Peter
 
Peter Halle said:
WarnerConstCo. said:
I don't want to spill the beans on what this one ended up costing me. [cool]

I respect your desire for quietness, but was this a positive or negative experience in your mind monetarily?\

I think it is great that you can do and are doing this!

Peter

Well I could have taken the old lady out to Applebee's for dinner, or bought and restored a chain mortiser.

Dinner is over rated. [big grin]

I wonder if Brian would let me bring my own tool to a class? [cool]
 
Pretty cool Darcy. Thanks for sharing. How many man hours you have into this so far?
 
I never mentioned anything about the Festo stock feeder that I also got from the same auction last summer.

It was in a box, tucked in a dirty old corner of the mill shop. Gave it a once over when I first found it (didn't want to draw other auction goer's attention) looked to be in good condition, but it was sort of disassembled.

I had to buy everything in the whole corner to get the feeder, which included a trailer full of stuff, lots of walnut ply, some starters and disconnects, scrap metal, and crap load of dust.

I ended up selling some stuff, trading some scrap metal for some machine parts that were going to scrap and basically got the stock feeder for free.

When I got around to pulling it out of the crate it was in, I realized that the motor rotor was missing, good luck finding that part I thought.

The feeder sat in that crate until last week when I decided to start the hunt ( for real) for a motor rotor.

Called all over the country, had a few leads. I received a phone call Sunday from a good friend who was also at the auction this came from.

He was going some place that had a beat up Festo Feeder.

I had him pick it up for me and drop it off at my shop. The arm was trashed, the mount was broke, the feeder was a 440 volt only machine, but the feeder itself was in decent shape.

I gutted that one today and installed the rotor in my other one and put it all back together.

There are a crap load of parts inside these things and they are very compact, compared to other feeders.

All I have left is to hook the wiring up, fill it with oil and pray it starts, it should, I have confidence.

As a bonus, I have spares of every part for my feeder, should be able to keep her on the road for my lifetime.

These feeders have 8 speeds forwards and 8 speeds in reverse and the top speed is pushing 120 feet per minute.

I shall provide pictures soon.

 
The feeder is alive and running well. I will get some pictures and make a quick video. It is quite compact compared to my holz-her.

Top speed is 120ft/min.  The insides of this thing was more complicated then the last transmission I opened up.
 
I am always behind on things.  I wanted to have this mounted and the DC hooked up last week.  I just got a new corrugated knife head and some custom knives for some mouldings on that curved porch. 

Well, I just got the feeder mounted, still need to hook up the DC and the faces on the fence. 

I am afraid it will tip this puny little shaper over. [big grin]





 
Heck yeah it looks like it's going to tip that puny shaper over.  And I'm unsure if there's such a thing as a "puny" shaper.  How much does the feeder weight.  'Nother cool find.  Sounds like quite the complicated but also very capable device, especially considering it's age.

Going to restore it like the mortiser?
 
Darcy, I am amazed at what you are able to accomplish with some of your ancient "finds"  I am not into restoring old equipment, but i have had several friends along the way who have restored many pieces of equipment.  I know how much work, and especially the research that goes into fixing those old pieces.  My hat goes off to what you are doing.
Tinker
 
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