Remove the mixing blade. Turn it clockwise to unscrew it from the shaft.
Remove the rubber gasket at the bottom of the shaft. Try prying it from the outside edge with a small screwdriver.
Remove any built up dough at the bottom that sneaked past the gasket.
Spray some penetrating oil down at the bottom of the shaft. I used AeroKroil. You may have to leave it there overnight. Put some paper towels underneath the bread machine in case the oil seeps through.
After letting the oil work it's magic, try running the machine to see if the shaft will turn.
Soak up the penetrating oil. Re-insert the gasket.
Good luck.
On the hockey stick, you have the shaft (the part you hold), and the blade (the part that touches the ice). In the blade, you have the Heel, which is the part connected to the shaft. Then you have the toe, which is the tip of the blade, or the end which does not connect to the shaft.
A bread maker includes the main body, lid, baking pan receptacle, a heater, steam vent, rotating shaft, kneading blade, and a control panel. Some bread makers also have viewing windows.
A replacement blade can be put into a tapered shaft as long as the blade has a tapered hosel. A standard hosel blade will not fit into a tapered shaft. The tapered shaft must also actually be a shaft and not a recently broken one-piece stick. Some players try to cut broken blades off of one-piece sticks and then think they can replace the blade in the remaining shaft. This can work in principle but only at the expense of the natural performance of the stick. It is generally not recommended.
yes
you will need a tapered blade preferably a Dolomite blade
Yes
yes
the curve from the shaft to the tip of the blade
The area near the bottom of the shaft where the width of the shaft decreases as it gets closer to the blade.
Yes, the blades are just glued into the shaft. Use a heat gun to melt down the glue, pull out the blade and put it in your new shaft.
yes but it's complicated to do. you have to put a layer or two of tape inside the shaft and then heat it up and glue it. depending on how much the blade was it may not be worth the hassle.
Remove the bolt holding the blade to the left