Does anyone have any information on a beaver 49 planer?
Is it a planer or a jointer?
Couldn't find a planer on VM, but they have several jointers listed. Doesn't mean it's not a planer, just no planers documented there from Beaver... yet...
http://www.vintagemachinery.org/mfgindex/detail.aspx?id=83&tab=4 (http://www.vintagemachinery.org/mfgindex/detail.aspx?id=83&tab=4)
I guess it could be a jointer. It will cut ship lap and tongue and groove plus straight edging
I've looked through that list before and didn't see it. I found one on a website for an auction in the states that called it a planer. Tradewest Sales : COMPLETE SAWMILL, PLANER & (http://www.tradewestsales.com/sales/okfalls/)
That looks like a big old school 4 head push feed molder. I'd expect babbitt bearings, square heads. Slow setups and probably a handyman special full of repair brazing from some serious crashes of a long life. If you're asking about it, it's probably more work than you know or want.
Haha I've got a pretty good idea about that. I'm having trouble finding any information on them though
Hmm... I'm by no means an expert, but that's a new one for me.
Looks like a double sided planer to me. Don't see where it would hold a side head or the belts to drive it (at least based on the one decent picture).
I also think that despite the flat belts, it may be newer (relatively speaking) construction. The base and much of the frame is welded and bolted channel and steel shapes. If it were old enough to have Babbitt bearings, it would have a lot more cast iron.
My guess is a low volume "custom" equipment shop.
Ours looks to be a fair bit older than the one in the picture. I'll try and get a picture when we get it home
So, I can help a little. It is a four head planer/moulder. Alec and I own serial number 83. Ours is in nice shape, it has pillow block and roller bearings all over. They were quite popular up here I know of at least a few of them.
We also own a much older Waterous 5 head planer/moulder. It has Babbitt bearings and also runs two side heads and one shaped head overhead, as well as the two planer knives. It's all cast construction and mainly gear drive. A simply Beautiful machine, more closely resembling a Southbend lathe than a piece of sawmill machinery. We plan to restore the Waterous and run the Beaver.
Oh hi Alec! No point in commenting on what you already know ha ha!
(https://forestryforum.com/gallery/albums/userpics/47824/BE381BDC-8F47-457F-A358-6E09AEB69C5A.jpeg?easyrotate_cache=1540178109)
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Hi,
I own and operated a beaver 49 for 30 years what kind of information are you looking to attain?