> For that many rollers and that amount of money, personally I would spend it
> on a small
> lathe such as a Unimat, Taig or Sherline (I'm a Unimat fanatic myself, I love
> 'em. A
> vastly underrated machine if there ever was one).
Actually I have a Myford Super 7...
> For sources of hard rub
I don't know about the materials, but I can say that his work has been so
good, that I never even thought to even ask about a warranty.
His email addresses are at the bottom of his very 90s looking website, and
he usually replies within a day.
On Tue, Nov 17, 2015 at 10:24 AM, Ali wrote:
> >
Original Message
Subject: RE: QIC capstan
From:"tony duell"
Date:Wed, November 18, 2015 4:43 am
To: "General Discussion: On-Topic and
>
> http://terrysrubberrollers.com/
>
> Terry has rebuilt about a dozen rollers for me over the past 2 years.
> You'll need to remove the roller and send it in to him with a money order
> (he doesn't take checks or credit cards), but he'll do a fantastic job for
> about $40-50 per roller.
Any sug
> Terry has rebuilt about a dozen rollers for me over the past 2 years.
> You'll need to remove the roller and send it in to him with a money
> order (he doesn't take checks or credit cards), but he'll do a
> fantastic job for about $40-50 per roller.
Just wondering what kind of material he uses t
heap, but worth it if you really want to restore it so it works.
On Tue, Nov 17, 2015 at 1:47 AM, supervinx wrote:
> I got an HP 9000/340 with a 9144 QIC unit.
> The QIC capstan has softened without losing its shape, so I measured it
> with a gauge.
> How can I replace it?
>
I got an HP 9000/340 with a 9144 QIC unit.
The QIC capstan has softened without losing its shape, so I measured it
with a gauge.
How can I replace it?
Thanks
--
Vincenzo (aka Supervinx)
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