Craftsman 108.22920 Power Hacksaw

rodm717

Registered
Registered
Joined
Sep 1, 2017
Messages
184
Another machine i picked up recently. I've seen these many times and didnt grab one. This is in excellent shape and came with a replacement friction belt, instructions and original bill of sale. Good shape for its age. This is how i got it before i clean her up. The hydraulic cylinder still seems good so far.
Lowers very smoothly.

20180425_194807.jpg

20180425_194841.jpg

20180425_194910.jpg

20180425_195558.jpg

20180425_200337.jpg

20180425_200348.jpg
 
Last edited:
Interesting design- unusual drive arrangement
I would grease the drive gears liberally as they look like they may be zamak alloy
Mark
 
That base can't be the original, can it be?
 
I owned one back in the seventies use a good tacky grease or gear oil or not , it's better to use oil and frequently . Chips from cutting will wear out the gears quicker . I'd say use oil, mine worked well for years and sold when the need for money took over. Never had a gear problem even open like that. The base is original to the saw.
 
if you look at all the components and how they match the saw, I would definitely say the base is original. Everything lines up perfectly.
The blade should be arriving today.
 
Wait...what? Is that a hacksaw or a bandsaw?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
 
Wait...what? Is that a hacksaw or a bandsaw?


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Lol. Hacksaw is the name they gave it.
Yes, it's a small bandsaw. For whatever reason, Sears / Craftsman decided to name it a Power Hacksaw. Take a look at invoice.
I'll post some more pics soon. This little key is great. Has oil points at all the right locations, even on blade guide bearings.
Very underrated price of equipment. Perfect for home shop or hobbies. I previously ow ed a Little Machine Shop 4829. That you had to stand there and use manual labor the entire cutting process. This is set it and go work on something else until it gets done. Huge difference. I am fabricating a tray and shed plate to hook up some lubrication.
Yes, a small bandsaw.
 
Lol. Hacksaw is the name they gave it.
Yes, it's a small bandsaw. For whatever reason, Sears / Craftsman decided to name it a Power Hacksaw. Take a look at invoice.
I'll post some more pics soon. This little key is great. Has oil points at all the right locations, even on blade guide bearings.
Very underrated price of equipment. Perfect for home shop or hobbies. I previously ow ed a Little Machine Shop 4829. That you had to stand there and use manual labor the entire cutting process. This is set it and go work on something else until it gets done. Huge difference. I am fabricating a tray and shed plate to hook up some lubrication.
Yes, a small bandsaw.

That is really interesting. Covell, if I recall correctly, was the manufacturer of the actual power hacksaw sold under the Sears Craftsman name. Perhaps @wa5cab can chime in here. I didn't know there was a bandsaw version sold under the Sears/Craftsman name. I learn something new everyday! Thanks!

That looks like a nice unit. Really happy you were able to put it to good use.
 
That is really interesting. Covell, if I recall correctly, was the manufacturer of the actual power hacksaw sold under the Sears Craftsman name. Perhaps @wa5cab can chime in here. I didn't know there was a bandsaw version sold under the Sears/Craftsman name. I learn something new everyday! Thanks!

That looks like a nice unit. Really happy you were able to put it to good use.
Power Hacksaw is the correct name. It really will come in handy and is in pretty good shape. Trying to cut a 3" peice of aluminum, took forever with the other saw.
Has anyone noticed the felt between the bearing and bracket? Fine piece of utilitarian engineering.
As a side note, this is such a refreshing change from some of the other machine forums.

20180426_172144.jpg

20180426_172223.jpg

20180426_172102.jpg

20180426_172113.jpg

20180426_172129.jpg
 
Last edited:
"108" is the Sears Manufacture's Code for Covel Mfg. Co. The 108.22920 and 109.22921 are sequential versions, although not having the manual on the 22920 I don't know exactly what was changed. After production began on the 22921, Atlas apparently bought Covel and the next year Sears sold the saw as the 101.22922. This style saw was originally known as "continuous blade power hack saw" and later as "horizontal cutoff band saw". Or variations on those terms.

We have the Sears manuals on the latter two models. If you can do a scan to PDF or TIF of the papers that you got with it, that might be useful to someone.
 
Back
Top