I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
(If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
Thanks
"Robert Kline" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
> going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
> (If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
> treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
> wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
> Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
> Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
> Thanks
DAGS for bandsaw blade drift. Assuming it tracks properly and the tension
is set properly, each blade has its own drift. Once you determine what
your's is, set your fence for the drift and straight cuts are in your
future.
Dave
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Is it a slightly different length? maybe tighten up the tension a notch
and check the tracking.
"Robert Kline" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
> going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
> (If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
> treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
> wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
> Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
> Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
> Thanks
Each blade has its own drift angle. Mark a line parallel to the edge of a
board. Cut along this line freehand until blade is cutting straight down the
line. Cut off the saw and adjust the fence to edge of the board. This fence
is now adjusted to how that blade cuts.
For a really good book on this, jigs, tuning up your bandsaw, etc., pick up
the "Bandsaw Handbook", by Mark Duginske.
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0806963980/qid=1136419336/sr=2-3/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_3/102-4982806-8424147?s=books&v=glance&n=283155
Preston
"Robert Kline" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
> going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
> (If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
> treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
> wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
> Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
> Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
> Thanks
Robert:
Sounds like a bad weld or maybe a tooth problem, but regardless, just
take it back and get a new one!
Robert Kline wrote:
> I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
> going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
> (If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
> treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
> wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
> Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
> Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
> Thanks
--
Joseph Connors
The New Golden Rule:
Those with the gold, make the rules!
I am not a top tool tech of any sort but what about the tires? would they be
wore out by being rounded over and just use to the old blade config?
Don D.
"Joseph Connors" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:5j%[email protected]...
> Robert:
>
> Sounds like a bad weld or maybe a tooth problem, but regardless, just take
> it back and get a new one!
>
>
>
> Robert Kline wrote:
>> I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been going
>> great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made. (If it
>> ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a treat for
>> the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing wanders all
>> over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence. Sooooo, I put
>> the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again. Both blades
>> came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
>> Thanks
>
> --
> Joseph Connors
> The New Golden Rule:
> Those with the gold, make the rules!
On Wed, 04 Jan 2006 23:43:20 GMT, "Leon"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>
>"Robert Kline" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>>I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
>> going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
>> (If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
>> treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
>> wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
>> Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
>> Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
>> Thanks
>
>Every blade is different. Fence adjustment may be needed for the new blade.
>Most blades require their own unique fence adjustment.
>
What Leon said !
Also, not uncommon at all to get a bad blade. Poor welds being my most
common complaint. Seems like fro every good blade I've bought locally,
I have gotten two that weren't worth a darn.
Gotta try ordering some good ones sometime.
Lenny
Also try rounding of the rear of the blade with a sharpening stone. With
the blade running gently round off the rear of the blade with the stone.
JJS
Robert Kline wrote:
> I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
> going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
> (If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
> treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
> wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
> Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
> Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
> Thanks
"Robert Kline" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I rip 3/4" walnut on my Jet 14" bandsaw with a 1/2"blade. It's been
> going great for a year (ripped about 500 feet) with no adjustments made.
> (If it ain't broke, don't fix it) Well, I thought I'd give the saw a
> treat for the new year and put on a new blade. Now the &%#@ing thing
> wanders all over the place and I can't get it to rip using the fence.
> Sooooo, I put the old blade back on and now it's running smoothly again.
> Both blades came from the same shop. Any guesses what's happening?
> Thanks
Every blade is different. Fence adjustment may be needed for the new blade.
Most blades require their own unique fence adjustment.
On Wed, 04 Jan 2006 16:59:23 -0600, Robert Kline
<[email protected]> wrote:
>Any guesses what's happening?
Probably a length / elastic modulus variation. Simpler bandsaws are very
cross-dependent between tension and tracking settings. Re-tension it
equally after changing the belt and the wheel position might now be
different enough to throw the tracking out. I've even seen saws where
cleaning accumulated dust from around the upper wheel mount was enough
to cant the tracking over a bit.
Whenever you've changed one setting, you really need to work through the
list again - tension, tracking and right out to the guides. You can't
just hot-swap one at a time.