Figure another $300 for a fence and same for the motor, but compared to a new saw it's still a deal. There's a lot of little parts of which, any one of them gone bad can cause poor performance.Īll in all, if the saw is in otherwise good shape, with a single-phase motor, a serviceable fence and new belts and bearings, you'll have spent a shade over $500 and have a lifetime piece of machinery. Standard model is 20.5 length x 17.5 wide x 8.5 deep. It fits all Rockwell table saws with the oval opening. The Rockwell dust collection set includes a motor cover, door, dust port and dust chute. Also, runout can be a problem on older table saws. Rockwell Unisaw goose egg motor cover, dust hose adapter and door all painted up. I wouldn't use a Rockwell-era Unisaw (I'm assuming pre-1985) without replacing belts and bearings. All of the other little parts can start costing big $$$ if there's problems. I have a Mule Accusquare fence on my current Unisaw and really like it - and they are reasonably cheap. Fence is another big deal - mine had a Unifence and I hate them.
However - if you don't have a phase converter, pony up for a static converter or a new motor. This is a reproduction, not a photocopy, of an original Rockwell 10 Tilting Arbor Unisaw Instructions and Parts Manual which covers the 34-450. DELTA-ROCKWELL 10 Older Tilting Arbor Unisaw Operating & Parts Manual quantity.
Mine had a three phase motor but I also have a 10-hp rotary phase converter, so no worries. DELTA ROCKWELL UNISAW RESCUE AND RESTORATION PART 1 OF 4. Unisaws are pretty bulletproof, but they can become a money pit. I bought one of them from a school sealed-bid auction, paid $250, and never used it.