JJ

25/04/2007 2:37 PM

WOODEN BANDSAW - PDF

http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf



JOAT
If you don't ask the right questions, the answers don't matter.
- W.S. Lind


This topic has 9 replies

so

sailor

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

27/04/2007 4:59 AM

The first band saw I used was a wooden one my Grandfather made.
The wheels were made out of a pair of Soap Box Derby wheels.

FH

Father Haskell

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

27/04/2007 9:58 AM

On Apr 25, 2:37 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
> http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf

Pretty. How would spoked bike wheels work instead of those
plywood discs? A stripped bike would probably yield all the
parts needed for a multi-speed bandsaw except for blade.

Google turns up nothing for "walking beam saw."


JJ

in reply to Father Haskell on 27/04/2007 9:58 AM

01/05/2007 3:06 PM

Fri, Apr 27, 2007, 9:58am (EDT-3) [email protected]
(Father=A0Haskell) doth sayeth:
Pretty. How would spoked bike wheels work instead of those plywood
discs? A stripped bike would probably yield all the parts needed for a
multi-speed bandsaw except for blade.
Google turns up nothing for "walking beam saw."

I haven't really being paying attention. But I've seen a couple
of other plans for homemade bandsaws, and I have seen one using bike
wheels. If I recall right, they used rubberbands, cut from the tubes,
around the inside of the wheels. Supposedly that worked fine. I've
seen plans for bandsaw mills that used golf kart rims, or similar, and I
guess they work fine.

As soon as I saw "walking beam saw" I knew what you meant. Don't
recall if I've heard them called that (maybe rocking beam), but Fine
Woodworking had plans for one long ago (plans for a wooden bandsaw too). =


There's plans for parallel arm scroll saws out there. Might be
able to scale them up, for a larger blade, if you can't find plans for a
'walking beam saw'.



JOAT
If you don't ask the right questions, the answers don't matter.
- W.S. Lind

so

sailor

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

27/04/2007 11:03 AM

On Apr 27, 12:58=EF=BF=BDpm, Father Haskell <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Apr 25, 2:37 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
>
> >http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf
>
> Pretty. =A0How would spoked bike wheels work instead of those
> plywood discs? =A0A stripped bike would probably yield all the
> parts needed for a multi-speed bandsaw except for blade.
>
The Soap Box Derby wheels Grampa had, had solid rubber tires, that
tapered in to the tread area, for low rolling resistance. He somehow
shaved the tires down so the tread area got wider. About 1" as I
remember. It was 45 years ago!
The wheel itself was solid sided. The bearings were about 4" apart.
The wheel sides tapered from the bearing area to the tire area.

I used the other 2 wheels and axel to make a cart, so I could try to
kill myself going down the hill!

FH

Father Haskell

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

30/04/2007 7:59 PM

On Apr 30, 7:42 am, "sweet sawdust" <[email protected]>
wrote:
> "Father Haskell" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>
> news:[email protected]...> On Apr 25, 2:37 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
> >>http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf
>
> > Pretty. How would spoked bike wheels work instead of those
> > plywood discs? A stripped bike would probably yield all the
> > parts needed for a multi-speed bandsaw except for blade.
>
> > Google turns up nothing for "walking beam saw."
>
> Interesting idea. How would you crown or taper the wheels to accept the saw
> blade? My first thought is to used wooden inserts to fill in the rim of
> the wheel and then use a lathe to cut the proper crown or taper.

They already come crowned. Fine-tune the crown by changing tire
width or with a pump.

FC

Frank Campbell

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

27/04/2007 6:16 AM

In article <[email protected]>, J T
<[email protected]> wrote:

> http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf

First bandsaw I ever used was one of these, borrowed it from my
brother-in-laws dad for a project I was doing. He did a nice job
building it, worked great. He built it to finish a thirty foot sailboat
from a wooden hull he bought, sold that boat after a few years and then
did a forty foot fiberglass one with it as well.

--
http://doit101.com

ss

"sweet sawdust"

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

30/04/2007 6:42 AM


"Father Haskell" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Apr 25, 2:37 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
>> http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf
>
> Pretty. How would spoked bike wheels work instead of those
> plywood discs? A stripped bike would probably yield all the
> parts needed for a multi-speed bandsaw except for blade.
>
> Google turns up nothing for "walking beam saw."
Interesting idea. How would you crown or taper the wheels to accept the saw
blade? My first thought is to used wooden inserts to fill in the rim of
the wheel and then use a lathe to cut the proper crown or taper.

ss

"sweet sawdust"

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

01/05/2007 9:15 AM


"Father Haskell" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Apr 30, 7:42 am, "sweet sawdust" <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>> "Father Haskell" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>>
>> news:[email protected]...> On Apr 25,
>> 2:37 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
>> >>http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf
>>
>> > Pretty. How would spoked bike wheels work instead of those
>> > plywood discs? A stripped bike would probably yield all the
>> > parts needed for a multi-speed bandsaw except for blade.
>>
>> > Google turns up nothing for "walking beam saw."
>>
>> Interesting idea. How would you crown or taper the wheels to accept the
>> saw
>> blade? My first thought is to used wooden inserts to fill in the rim
>> of
>> the wheel and then use a lathe to cut the proper crown or taper.
>
> They already come crowned. Fine-tune the crown by changing tire
> width or with a pump.
>Wouldn't you still have the problem of tred on the tires? Slight on a lot
of street tires but still there. Then there's the problem of tire pressure
when you tension the blade. It looks to me like the pressure applied to
tension the blade would cause a deformity in the tire and change the
tracking of the blade. Wear on the tire should be slight so that wouldn't
be a problem. You have almost gotten me in the mood to try to make one

JG

Joe Gorman

in reply to [email protected] (J T) on 25/04/2007 2:37 PM

01/05/2007 7:19 AM

Father Haskell wrote:
> On Apr 25, 2:37 pm, [email protected] (J T) wrote:
>> http://www.vintageprojects.com/power-tools/bandsaw.pdf
>
> Pretty. How would spoked bike wheels work instead of those
> plywood discs? A stripped bike would probably yield all the
> parts needed for a multi-speed bandsaw except for blade.
>
> Google turns up nothing for "walking beam saw."
>
>
>
A little late, but I've been out for a few days
alltheweb.com has a few hits
http://alltheweb.com/search?advanced=1&cat=web&jsact=&_stype=norm&type=phrase&q=walking+beam+saw&itag=crv&_b_query=&l=en&ics=utf-8&cs=iso88591&wf%5Bn%5D=3&wf%5B0%5D%5Br%5D=%2B&wf%5B0%5D%5Bq%5D=&wf%5B0%5D%5Bw%5D=&wf%5B1%5D%5Br%5D=-&wf%5B1%5D%5Bq%5D=&wf%5B1%5D%5Bw%5D=&wf%5B2%5D%5Br%5D=%2B&wf%5B2%5D%5Bq%5D=&wf%5B2%5D%5Bw%5D=&dincl=&dexcl=&geo=&doctype=&dfr%5Bd%5D=1&dfr%5Bm%5D=1&dfr%5By%5D=1980&dto%5Bd%5D=1&dto%5Bm%5D=5&dto%5By%5D=2007&hits=10
Joe


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