IV

Ivan Vegvary

05/04/2017 1:47 PM

THANK YOU (Help sawing straight)

THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
What a difference a sharp blade makes!


This topic has 10 replies

Dt

DerbyDad03

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

06/04/2017 3:52 AM

On Wednesday, April 5, 2017 at 4:47:50 PM UTC-4, Ivan Vegvary wrote:
> THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
> Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
> Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
> What a difference a sharp blade makes!

Perhaps you should post your solution in the original thread. You know, sort of close it out for
anyone who comes across that thread later on.

k

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

06/04/2017 8:52 PM

On Thu, 6 Apr 2017 14:15:39 -0500, Leon <lcb11211@swbelldotnet> wrote:

>On 4/6/2017 1:04 PM, woodchucker wrote:
>> On 4/5/2017 8:47 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>>> On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:47:48 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
>>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>>> THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
>>>> Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
>>>> Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length
>>>> cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
>>>> What a difference a sharp blade makes!
>>>
>>> Make sure you install it in the right direction, too. DAMHIKT
>>>
>>
>> You may joke about that, but I have a lefty porter cable and I did one
>> time put a ply blade (HSS) on backward. The smoke was outstanding as I
>> was cutting through a cabinet to cut the kickplate are off of it so I
>> could put it on wheels. Glad it was not carbide, as I am sure I would
>> have knocked them all off.
>
>Yes being use to seeing the print on the blade will throw you off if you
>are putting the blade on a backwards setup.

I don't go by the label anymore. It's easier to visualize the
rotation rather then remembering whether that saw is an innie or
outie.
>
>FWIW a siding and or steel building fabricators will use a carbide blade
>backwards to get a smoother cut.

Yes, I used my RAS to cut vinyl-clad aluminum siding for the addition
I built on my first house.
>
>>
>> On my lefty saw, if you see he label, it's on wrong.
>>

nn

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

06/04/2017 1:15 PM

On Thursday, April 6, 2017 at 2:16:05 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
=20
> FWIW a siding and or steel building fabricators will use a carbide blade=
=20
> backwards to get a smoother cut.

Quit hanging around with that kind of contractor!

Seriously, there are a lot better solutions than the old backwards blade tr=
ick. It doesn't work well with carbide blades anyway. At least not as wel=
l as when we did that with steel blades.

This is today's solution. Note that they aren't any more expensive that a =
moderately priced carbide blade for wood cutting:

Non ferrous: https://goo.gl/Ts0VS7

Ferrous: https://goo.gl/vBJdUq

They make blades that will dry cut ferrous materials up to 16 gauge! That'=
s pushing 1/8". I actually discovered those a few years ago when a friend =
of mine told me that he had seen a show on barbecuing where there was a seg=
ment on making a pit from a propane tank. He told me he saw a guy "with a =
Skilsaw cutting a tank in two". He bought one of the blades and it chewed =
right through a propane tank!

Robert=20

Ll

Leon

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

06/04/2017 3:37 PM

On 4/6/2017 3:15 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> On Thursday, April 6, 2017 at 2:16:05 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
>
>> FWIW a siding and or steel building fabricators will use a carbide blade
>> backwards to get a smoother cut.
>
> Quit hanging around with that kind of contractor!

LOL..

I think I saw that on TOH.
>
> Seriously, there are a lot better solutions than the old backwards blade trick. It doesn't work well with carbide blades anyway. At least not as well as when we did that with steel blades.
>
> This is today's solution. Note that they aren't any more expensive that a moderately priced carbide blade for wood cutting:
>
> Non ferrous: https://goo.gl/Ts0VS7
>
> Ferrous: https://goo.gl/vBJdUq
>
> They make blades that will dry cut ferrous materials up to 16 gauge! That's pushing 1/8". I actually discovered those a few years ago when a friend of mine told me that he had seen a show on barbecuing where there was a segment on making a pit from a propane tank. He told me he saw a guy "with a Skilsaw cutting a tank in two". He bought one of the blades and it chewed right through a propane tank!
>
> Robert
>

k

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

05/04/2017 8:47 PM

On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:47:48 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
<[email protected]> wrote:

>THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
>Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
>Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
>What a difference a sharp blade makes!

Make sure you install it in the right direction, too. DAMHIKT

Dt

DerbyDad03

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

06/04/2017 1:32 PM

On Thursday, April 6, 2017 at 2:05:09 PM UTC-4, woodchucker wrote:
> On 4/5/2017 8:47 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> > On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:47:48 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
> > <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> >> THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
> >> Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
> >> Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
> >> What a difference a sharp blade makes!
> >
> > Make sure you install it in the right direction, too. DAMHIKT
> >
>
> You may joke about that, but I have a lefty porter cable and I did one
> time put a ply blade (HSS) on backward. The smoke was outstanding...

BTDT

But I love my left handed PC saw.

wn

woodchucker

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

06/04/2017 2:04 PM

On 4/5/2017 8:47 PM, [email protected] wrote:
> On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:47:48 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
>> Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
>> Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
>> What a difference a sharp blade makes!
>
> Make sure you install it in the right direction, too. DAMHIKT
>

You may joke about that, but I have a lefty porter cable and I did one
time put a ply blade (HSS) on backward. The smoke was outstanding as I
was cutting through a cabinet to cut the kickplate are off of it so I
could put it on wheels. Glad it was not carbide, as I am sure I would
have knocked them all off.

On my lefty saw, if you see he label, it's on wrong.

--
Jeff

Oo

OFWW

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

05/04/2017 11:11 PM

On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:47:48 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
<[email protected]> wrote:

>THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
>Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
>Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
>What a difference a sharp blade makes!

AWESOME! Thanks for the feedback.

c

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

05/04/2017 5:15 PM

On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:47:48 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
<[email protected]> wrote:

>THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
>Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
>Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
>What a difference a sharp blade makes!
Tools don't make the man, but bad ones can sure unmake the man!!!

Ll

Leon

in reply to Ivan Vegvary on 05/04/2017 1:47 PM

06/04/2017 2:15 PM

On 4/6/2017 1:04 PM, woodchucker wrote:
> On 4/5/2017 8:47 PM, [email protected] wrote:
>> On Wed, 5 Apr 2017 13:47:48 -0700 (PDT), Ivan Vegvary
>> <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> THANK YOU, THANK YOU Group.
>>> Purchased new 6-1/2" blade (Irwin).
>>> Solved all my problems. Cut jig and subsequently made 9 full length
>>> cuts in 1-1/8" plywood for my stair treads (10-1/8" wide)
>>> What a difference a sharp blade makes!
>>
>> Make sure you install it in the right direction, too. DAMHIKT
>>
>
> You may joke about that, but I have a lefty porter cable and I did one
> time put a ply blade (HSS) on backward. The smoke was outstanding as I
> was cutting through a cabinet to cut the kickplate are off of it so I
> could put it on wheels. Glad it was not carbide, as I am sure I would
> have knocked them all off.

Yes being use to seeing the print on the blade will throw you off if you
are putting the blade on a backwards setup.

FWIW a siding and or steel building fabricators will use a carbide blade
backwards to get a smoother cut.


>
> On my lefty saw, if you see he label, it's on wrong.
>


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