I think I have a good question for the group
I am making a bunch of 3/4 thick parts out of oak and pine. They are various
shapes, anything from a 3" dia. circle to 16" circle, 3" sqaure, to a
12"x18" rectangle. All these parts when done need to have a .05 wide slot
around the perimeter, centered in the width. The slot must be a minimum of
1/2" deep. I work in a machine shop, so I purchased a .05 wide metal cutting
slitting saw that is 3" in dia. I also got a bearing that had a 2" o.d. I
then made an arbor to fit into my PC router, that mounts the bearing right
above the slitting saw. My problem is, when I use it I think the router is
going way to fast for the slitting saw, because it turned blue from the
heat. It cuts the slot, but I don't think it's going to last through a whole
lot of them.
My next try was to get the thinnest 10" saw blade that I could get for
my table saw. I then made and extension for my fence and stood the part on
edge and spun it through the saw blade. This worked also, but it seems a
little dangerous, if the wood would ever decide to take off. I really
wouldn't mind doing it this way, but when I checked the slot width it is
about .015 to wide. I mic'd the blade and found it was .065 across the
teeth.
My question is, does anyone have any better ideas how to put this slot
in the parts. Or do you know where I can buy a really thin 10" saw blade?
Thanks for any help
Bob
Robert Smith wrote:
> I work in a machine shop, so I
> purchased a .05 wide metal cutting slitting saw that is 3" in dia. I
> also got a bearing that had a 2" o.d. I then made an arbor to fit
> into my PC router, that mounts the bearing right above the slitting
> saw. My problem is, when I use it I think the router is going way to
> fast for the slitting saw, because it turned blue from the heat. It
> cuts the slot, but I don't think it's going to last through a whole
> lot of them.
Can you run it in a drill press?
-- Mark
>Robert Smith wrote:
>
>> I work in a machine shop, so I
>> purchased a .05 wide metal cutting slitting saw that is 3" in dia. I
>> also got a bearing that had a 2" o.d. I then made an arbor to fit
>> into my PC router, that mounts the bearing right above the slitting
>> saw. My problem is, when I use it I think the router is going way to
>> fast for the slitting saw, because it turned blue from the heat. It
>> cuts the slot, but I don't think it's going to last through a whole
>> lot of them.
>
A metal slitting saw is a poor choice for wood. They are ground with only a
minimum of clearance, which will make them rub and heat up in wood. Also, the
tooth design doesn't leave much room for sawdust.
The thinnest wood blades I've seen are the steel plywood blades, with thin
rims. I've got an 8" Simonds that I use in my tablesaw. You have to watch
it, though - if it starts to bind and heats up, the rim expands and gets wavy.
Wavy by 1/4" or more.
John Martin
RE: Subject
What you are trying to do is very similar to what is done to make stamping
dies for gaskets.
I'd probably approach this as a two (2) part product consisting of a piece
of 1/4" plywood and the 3/4" finish material.
Recess the plywood into the bottom of the piece, then layout the lines and
use a scroll saw.
Wedge some "bridges" into the saw cut at the appropriate locations to
maintain registration while you do the glue up, then remove them afterwards.
A flying red horse at 1,000 ft will never see that it is a two (2) piece
construction.
HTH
--
Lew
S/A: Challenge, The Bullet Proof Boat, (Under Construction in the Southland)
Visit: <http://home.earthlink.net/~lewhodgett> for Pictures
You have diagnosed the problem correctly, the router is too fast. You can
get a speed control for your router and try another slot cutter. You
probably had a hss slot cutter, and if the job will warrant the expense you
might want a carbide slot cutter.
Also, luthiers use very thin saw blade for cutting frets and such. You
could DAGS for luthier suppliers and see if they don't make a .050 saw. I'm
sorta remembering that they do.
--
Bill Pounds
http://www.bill.pounds.net/woodshop
"Robert Smith" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I think I have a good question for the group
>
> I am making a bunch of 3/4 thick parts out of oak and pine. They are
various
> shapes, anything from a 3" dia. circle to 16" circle, 3" sqaure, to a
> 12"x18" rectangle. All these parts when done need to have a .05 wide slot
> around the perimeter, centered in the width. The slot must be a minimum of
> 1/2" deep. I work in a machine shop, so I purchased a .05 wide metal
cutting
> slitting saw that is 3" in dia. I also got a bearing that had a 2" o.d. I
> then made an arbor to fit into my PC router, that mounts the bearing right
> above the slitting saw. My problem is, when I use it I think the router is
> going way to fast for the slitting saw, because it turned blue from the
> heat. It cuts the slot, but I don't think it's going to last through a
whole
> lot of them.
> My next try was to get the thinnest 10" saw blade that I could get for
> my table saw. I then made and extension for my fence and stood the part on
> edge and spun it through the saw blade. This worked also, but it seems a
> little dangerous, if the wood would ever decide to take off. I really
> wouldn't mind doing it this way, but when I checked the slot width it is
> about .015 to wide. I mic'd the blade and found it was .065 across the
> teeth.
> My question is, does anyone have any better ideas how to put this slot
> in the parts. Or do you know where I can buy a really thin 10" saw blade?
>
> Thanks for any help
> Bob
>
>
Andy Dingley wrote:
> On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 18:23:57 GMT, "Robert Smith"
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >All these parts when done need to have a .05 wide slot
> >around the perimeter, centered in the width.
>
> I've been making these lately:
> http://codesmiths.com/shed/things/trays/
>
> They need a narrow _stopped_ slot to take 18 gauge copper (about .05 )
> and I had a lot of trouble working out how to do this.
>
> First few were hand-sawn, which took longer to do than the rest of the
> tray, metalwork included.
>
> Now I use a metal slitting saw, held vertical axis in a milling
> machine. A dedicated wooden fence clamps to the table of the mill.
> This works well and is quick to use, but it does have some drawbacks.
>
> Slitting saws aren't intended for wood, so they have negligible chip
> clearance. Find the biggest teeth you can. I'm even considering
> grinding alternate teeth out. Don't plunge them in full depth, because
> if they heat up and bind, they'll smash your stock clear through any
> jig. A milling machine has huge torque, compared to a woodworking
> machine.
>
> Fortunately the mill allows me to move the cross-slide back and forth
> in a controlled manner, which controls cut depth. I did consider
> clamping the stock down and using the slide's traverse to feed the
> saw, but decided to hand-feed instead, as I can feel the blade heating
> up and starting to bind.
>
> Because it's a stopped slot, I'm using a tiny diameter saw. If I
> could, I'd use a bigger one.
>
> --
> Die Gotterspammerung - Junkmail of the Gods
Couldn't you fabricate a .05 thick blade and make a router plane?
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
(Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply)
Andy Dingley wrote:
> On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 22:34:53 GMT, Nova <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
> >Couldn't you fabricate a .05 thick blade and make a router plane?
>
> I'm going about 1/4" deep in hard oak, so I think that's a depth/width
> ratio that's a bit unworkable.
>
> I think what I really need is a saw with deep tooth gullets ground
> into it, to improve chip clearance, and a jig with a better hand-held
> sliding carriage with built-in end stops. I'm tooling up to make
> these in volume, so it's worth thinking about. I can make the
> copperwork in an hour for each, plus another hour to patinate and
> finish them.
What about something like a back saw blade clamped between two rabbeted
pieces of stock? The rebates would keep the blade centered and act as a
fence/depth stop.
--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
(Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply)
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 18:23:57 GMT, "Robert Smith"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>I think I have a good question for the group
>
>I am making a bunch of 3/4 thick parts out of oak and pine. They are various
>shapes, anything from a 3" dia. circle to 16" circle, 3" sqaure, to a
>12"x18" rectangle. All these parts when done need to have a .05 wide slot
>around the perimeter, centered in the width. The slot must be a minimum of
>1/2" deep. I work in a machine shop, so I purchased a .05 wide metal cutting
>slitting saw that is 3" in dia. I also got a bearing that had a 2" o.d. I
>then made an arbor to fit into my PC router, that mounts the bearing right
>above the slitting saw. My problem is, when I use it I think the router is
>going way to fast for the slitting saw, because it turned blue from the
>heat. It cuts the slot, but I don't think it's going to last through a whole
>lot of them.
Man...Although I have done exciting things like that myself,
it kind of makes me draw up a bit to think about it.
> My next try was to get the thinnest 10" saw blade that I could get for
>my table saw. I then made and extension for my fence and stood the part on
>edge and spun it through the saw blade. This worked also, but it seems a
>little dangerous, if the wood would ever decide to take off. I really
>wouldn't mind doing it this way, but when I checked the slot width it is
>about .015 to wide. I mic'd the blade and found it was .065 across the
>teeth.
> My question is, does anyone have any better ideas how to put this slot
>in the parts. Or do you know where I can buy a really thin 10" saw blade?
>
>Thanks for any help
>Bob
>
>
Well, it depends...there is more than one way to do this. For
the "round" parts, I would suggest running over to WoodCraft and
buying a nice lathe that will spin them, and, a chuck/faceplate to
hold them. Then, use that machine shop to mill a "parting tool"
to the appropriate width. Spin the disk, and carefully cut the
groove. If made of HSS, it should last 'forever'.
As for the square pieces...I think I would get a cheap
carbide blade, and, using the tools at the machine shop, carefully
grind the teeth down a bit in width until I had an appropriate kerf
width. I would then set the blade to about 1/2" depth of cut and
simply run the square/rectangular stock through on all four edges.
One could also use this to cut the groove in the edge of the round
pieces by making a tenoning jig sort of thing and screwing the disks
to it. A bolt through the center would work and make it easy to
loosen and tighten for a safe cut. A series of passes through the
saw, loosening and turning the wheel slightly after each one, would
do the job.
Now...if you don't want HOLES in the disks...I would put a
couple of shallow, triangular ramps onto the jig, just to the front
and back of the contact point on the table of the saw (which would
hold a variety of disk sizes and stabilize them, then, use a couple of
De-Sta-Co toggle clamps to lock the disk in place. Back to several
passes through the blade to get the groove done.
Regards
Dave Mundt
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 18:23:57 GMT, "Robert Smith"
<[email protected]> wrote:
>All these parts when done need to have a .05 wide slot
>around the perimeter, centered in the width.
I've been making these lately:
http://codesmiths.com/shed/things/trays/
They need a narrow _stopped_ slot to take 18 gauge copper (about .05 )
and I had a lot of trouble working out how to do this.
First few were hand-sawn, which took longer to do than the rest of the
tray, metalwork included.
Now I use a metal slitting saw, held vertical axis in a milling
machine. A dedicated wooden fence clamps to the table of the mill.
This works well and is quick to use, but it does have some drawbacks.
Slitting saws aren't intended for wood, so they have negligible chip
clearance. Find the biggest teeth you can. I'm even considering
grinding alternate teeth out. Don't plunge them in full depth, because
if they heat up and bind, they'll smash your stock clear through any
jig. A milling machine has huge torque, compared to a woodworking
machine.
Fortunately the mill allows me to move the cross-slide back and forth
in a controlled manner, which controls cut depth. I did consider
clamping the stock down and using the slide's traverse to feed the
saw, but decided to hand-feed instead, as I can feel the blade heating
up and starting to bind.
Because it's a stopped slot, I'm using a tiny diameter saw. If I
could, I'd use a bigger one.
--
Die Gotterspammerung - Junkmail of the Gods
I don't thingk you will find a 10" blade near that thin, but there are
some 7 1/4" blades that have 1/16" kerf. You want .05"= 1/20th so that
is getting pretty close. If you can find a 7 1/4" steel (not carbide)
blade you may be able to carefully grind it down on the table saw. Or
a good sharpening shop could do it for you.
--
Larry Wasserman Baltimore, Maryland
[email protected]
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 22:34:53 GMT, Nova <[email protected]>
wrote:
>Couldn't you fabricate a .05 thick blade and make a router plane?
I'm going about 1/4" deep in hard oak, so I think that's a depth/width
ratio that's a bit unworkable.
I think what I really need is a saw with deep tooth gullets ground
into it, to improve chip clearance, and a jig with a better hand-held
sliding carriage with built-in end stops. I'm tooling up to make
these in volume, so it's worth thinking about. I can make the
copperwork in an hour for each, plus another hour to patinate and
finish them.
--
Die Gotterspammerung - Junkmail of the Gods
On Fri, 24 Oct 2003 23:53:53 GMT, Nova <[email protected]>
wrote:
>What about something like a back saw blade clamped between two rabbeted
>pieces of stock? The rebates would keep the blade centered and act as a
>fence/depth stop.
How I normally saw this sort of groove is with my azebiki saw
http://www.axminster.co.uk/default.asp?part=384016
The problems in this case are that:
- It's damn slow. There's four foot of groove in one of those trays.
- It's a pain to do the stopped ends
- (the real killer) I just couldn't find any sawblade thick enough
(16 gauge) to cut it in one pass.
I made three trays by hand-sawing the slots and I won't do any more
that way. I couldn't afford to, for one thing.
--
Die Gotterspammerung - Junkmail of the Gods