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Delta 37-070 6" bench jointer

Delta 37-070 6" bench jointer Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Delta 37-070 6" bench jointer, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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Browse Parts for 37-070 Power Tools

  • Planer Knife Adjuster Bar Clamp for Delta 37-070 - Part 1345935

    Table diagram

    Planer Knife Adjuster Bar Clamp

    Part #1345935

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Flat Washer for Delta 37-070 - Part 1344330

    Flat Washer

    Part #1344330

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Scale for Delta 37-070 - Part 1345851

    Table diagram

    Scale

    Part #1345851

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Rear Frame for Delta 37-070 - Part 1345892

    Table diagram

    Rear Frame

    Part #1345892

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • (din 7962b) M3.9 X 13mm Flat Hd Scr for Delta 37-070 - Part 1343612

    (din 7962b) M3.9 X 13mm Flat Hd Scr

    Part #1343612

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Twist-on Wire Connector for Delta 37-070 - Part 438-01-007-0009

    Guard/housing diagram

    Twist-on Wire Connector

    Part #438-01-007-0009

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Insulator for Delta 37-070 - Part 1345926

    Guard/housing diagram

    Insulator

    Part #1345926

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • End Cover for Delta 37-070 - Part 1345875

    Table diagram

    End Cover

    Part #1345875

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Wavy Wshr for Delta 37-070 - Part 1343125

    Guard/housing diagram

    Wavy Wshr

    Part #1343125

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

Delta 6" Bench Jointer 37-070 FAQs

Yes. Delta jointers are a solid, proven choice for most home shops, and the Delta 37-070 6-inch bench jointer is typically a good fit for light to moderate jointing when it is tuned correctly and the knives are sharp. Overall results depend more on condition, setup, and cutterhead/knife quality than the logo on the base.

What “good” means for a Delta 37-070 jointer

A jointer is only as good as its alignment and cutting edges. For a 6-inch bench jointer like the Delta 37-070, “good” usually means it can produce straight, square edges and flat faces on shorter stock without chatter.

Key performance checks:

  • Infeed and outfeed tables are coplanar (no twist)
  • Fence locks square and stays rigid under pressure
  • Knives are sharp and set evenly to the outfeed table
  • Cutterhead spins smoothly (no rumble or play)
  • Depth-of-cut adjustments move smoothly and hold position

Quick buy-or-fix checklist (used or existing tool)

Before you invest time or money, we recommend checking these common wear points:

  • Bearings: listen for growling or vibration at speed
  • Cutterhead/knife condition: nicks cause ridges and tear-out
  • Fence faces: dents or bowing can prevent square edges
  • Table surfaces: rust pits and dings can snag stock
  • Drive components: belt condition and pulley alignment (if belt-driven)

Typical expectations: bench jointer vs. floor jointer

Feature 6-inch bench jointer (like 37-070) Larger floor jointer
Best use Small projects, edge jointing Frequent use, longer boards
Stock length comfort Short to medium Medium to long
Setup sensitivity Higher Lower
Upgrade path Tune, sharpen, dust collection More power, longer beds

Why it matters

Most “bad jointer” complaints come from dull knives, mis-set knife height, or tables that are out of plane. When those basics are corrected, a Delta jointer can produce clean, repeatable joints and reduce sanding and glue-line gaps.

Finding the right parts and diagrams

For the Delta 37-070, we recommend using the model-based diagrams and parts lookup first; then, if you are searching beyond the model list (for example, hardware or accessories), use Sears PartsDirect to search by model number.

Last updated: February 2026

No. On a Delta 37-070 6-inch bench jointer, the jointer’s job is to flatten one face of a board and straighten one edge; a planer’s job is to make the opposite face parallel and bring the board to a consistent thickness.

What each tool is designed to do

  • Jointer: creates one flat reference face, then one straight, square edge
  • Planer (thickness planer): makes the second face parallel to the first and sets final thickness
  • Why they are not interchangeable: a jointer does not control thickness across the full board the way a planer does
Task Best tool Result you can count on
Flatten one face Jointer Flat reference face
Straighten one edge Jointer Edge ready for ripping/gluing
Make faces parallel Planer Uniform thickness
Reduce thickness evenly Planer Predictable final dimension

The right workflow for flat, consistent boards

We recommend this sequence for most lumber:

  • Joint one face until it is flat
  • Joint one edge square to that face
  • Rip the opposite edge on a table saw (using the jointed edge as the reference)
  • Plane the opposite face until the board reaches final thickness

Why it matters

If you try to “plane” with a jointer, you can end up with a board that looks smooth but is still tapered, twisted, or inconsistent in thickness. Using the jointer first gives you a true reference surface; the planer then makes the board uniformly thick.

Parts and support

For Delta 37-070 replacement parts and diagrams, start with the parts list for your model; you can also search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

Yes. Combination jointer/planer machines are common in woodworking; they combine a jointer for flattening and squaring a board face/edge with a planer for bringing the opposite face to a consistent thickness. If you already own a Delta 37-070 6-inch bench jointer, a combo unit is an alternative when you want both functions in one footprint.

What a jointer/planer combo does (and what it does not)

  • Jointer mode: flattens one face and squares one edge to that face.
  • Planer mode: makes the opposite face parallel and brings stock to final thickness.
  • Not a substitute for a table saw: it does not rip boards to width.
  • Not a wide planer: many combos have limited width capacity compared to standalone planers.

Quick comparison: combo vs separate machines

Option Best for Tradeoffs
Combo jointer/planer Small shops, one-machine workflow Changeover time between modes; shared cutterhead setup
Separate jointer + planer Faster workflow, dedicated setups More space; typically higher total cost
Delta 37-070 jointer + thickness planer Keeping your current jointer and adding thicknessing Two machines to store and maintain

What to check before buying a combo

  • Cutting width and depth of cut you need for your typical lumber.
  • Changeover design: how quickly it switches between jointing and planing.
  • Dust collection port size and whether your shop vac or collector matches.
  • Knife or cutterhead style: straight knives vs helical inserts (maintenance and finish quality).
  • Electrical requirements: confirm voltage and amperage for your shop circuit.

Why it matters

A jointer and planer solve different problems; using only one usually leaves boards either flat but not uniform thickness, or uniform thickness but still twisted or cupped. A combo unit gives you both capabilities while saving floor and bench space.

For parts lookups and model searches beyond what is listed for Delta 37-070, we recommend searching by model number on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

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