Page History: Origins of Two Bladed Table Saws
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Page Revision: 2008/04/11 17:35
quote: rbrt_brnstn{Reference:http://owwm.org/viewtopic.php?t=30899|http://owwm.org/viewtopic.php?t=30899}
I'd like to:
- make a list of as many makers of these as I can,
- date them as well as I can,
- find any patents pertaining to the design.
The saw that got me started thinking about this is listed in the OWWM.com archives under Indiana Machine Works and shown in a March, 1889, magazine note. Here is its:
Advertisement of Indiana Machne Works two blade saw |
Here are the suggestions so far (many a good bit later than this saw):
- American
- Baker Brothers
- Colburn
- Crescent
- Famous
- Fay
- Fay & Egan
- Greenlee
- Hall & Brown
- Luther
- Oliver
- Tannewitz
- Yates-American
You'll note that the Indian Machine advertisement:
- doesn't seem to make much of the dual arbor feature
- doesn't claim it is new.
The saw seems to have two tables, with one a slider, non-tilting table or arbors, with a tilting rip fence
quote Jeff Joslin
I started to reply to this yesterday but it led me down a research rathole and I never finished it. There are a bunch of names that can be added to the above list; the part that slowed me down was verifying which double-arbor saws have side-by-side blades which have collinear blades and a single blade opening.
The latter type of saw was, so far as I know, invented by
C. P. S. Wardwell. The history of Wardwell's saw is pretty complicated because it was briefly made by Wardwell himself, then by
L. D. Fay,
Rollstone Machine Works and
James Goodrich & Co. Then Wardwell resumed production.
Putnam Machine Co. made a version, and so did
C. H. Cowdrey. There was a bit of a patent war going on, as various people made changes to Wardwell's design to avoid his patents. It would take some serious research to figure out who was licensing whose designs.
The original Wardwell patent was
16,814, granted in 1857. I should add some links to the later patents from that patent. In the meantime, you can follow the trail of patents from the Wardwell entry on owwm.com. Here's a picture of the Wardwell design as made by Rollstone:
The Wardwell Design |
I just did a patent search for saws of this type, and Wardwell's patent does seem to be the first. The
second such patent was to Salmon Putnam, assigned to Putnam Machine Co., for an improvement to Wardwell's patent. The
third patent was to one Hiram Thompson, assigned to
R. Ball & Co., for a saw similar in concept but different in design to Wardwell's.
Jeff J.
quote Ray Muno regarding quote enivelmj "Another maker of co-linear dual arbor saws (I mean the kind which has dual arbors which pivot through one table opening.):
The generic name that was used for these type of saws was "Universal Saw Bench", at least in the early 1900's.
I see "American" and "Yates American" mentioned. "American"could mean "American Wood Working Machinery Company", which became part of "Yates American" or it could mean "American Machinery Company" which became Oliver.
AWWMC had a Universal Saw Bench but it was actually a "FH Clement" machine before "FH Clement" became part of AWWMC.
quote dpotts77
Matt *da torch* Prusik left a 1905 magazine in my mailbox a few weeks ago and one of the items I saw advetised in there was the Colburn saw. I've sent a scan to Jeff Joslin for entry into the Mfg'er index (as opposed to the MF'ers Index) since there were none posted previously.
Advertisement for the Colburn Saw Table |
DP,
NJ