gG

[email protected] (GBannish)

11/01/2005 2:05 AM

warped saw blade?

I have a 10 inch Freud table saw blade that is very warped, or bowed, to the
point where I can't rip anything if the blade is fully raised because it will
bind terribly between the rip fence and the center of the blade. If I lower
the blade to 1" it rips smooth as butter, and when I miter cut from the other
side of the blade it is similarly smooth, sharp and aligned. If I raise the
blade fully and measure flatness of the blade half-way between its center and
its outer edge, there is a 0.015 runout or bow. So instead of being flat, the
blade is more like a bowl. I'd like to know why this occurred and have 3
ideas, but am not sure which (if any is true):

1) The blade sucks, never was flat, and I need to spend $100 to get a real
blade.
2) I overtightened the arbor nut and introduced the warp into the blade. I did
tighten it probably too tight, not wanting it to loosen during use. And when I
removed the blade, the warpage definitely lessened at least to the point where
the teeth made contact with the table when resting flat on either side.
3) My arbor washer is incorrect for the arbor on my unisaw. The diameter of
the arbor is 2.5" and makes contact with the blade only on its perimeter. The
diameter of my arbor washer is only 1 7/8". So when I overtightened the arbor
nut, the smaller arbor washer cause the whole damn blade to cup into the arbor,
making a dish shape. Shouldn't the arbor washer be the same size diameter as
the arbor?

Thanks for any suggestions,
Greg
Greg


This topic has 3 replies

ma

max

in reply to [email protected] (GBannish) on 11/01/2005 2:05 AM

11/01/2005 4:31 PM

Over tightening the nut is the most common issue. The arbor is threaded so
that when the saw is spinning the nut self tightens. You only need a few
ounces of force on the wrench. In the olden days blades were made from thick
plate. Today's premium blades are made from better thinner steel. If the
blade is flat, use a steel straight edge across the blade to check, then put
it back and don't tighten it as much.
max

> I have a 10 inch Freud table saw blade that is very warped, or bowed, to the
> point where I can't rip anything if the blade is fully raised because it will
> bind terribly between the rip fence and the center of the blade. If I lower
> the blade to 1" it rips smooth as butter, and when I miter cut from the other
> side of the blade it is similarly smooth, sharp and aligned. If I raise the
> blade fully and measure flatness of the blade half-way between its center and
> its outer edge, there is a 0.015 runout or bow. So instead of being flat, the
> blade is more like a bowl. I'd like to know why this occurred and have 3
> ideas, but am not sure which (if any is true):
>
> 1) The blade sucks, never was flat, and I need to spend $100 to get a real
> blade.
> 2) I overtightened the arbor nut and introduced the warp into the blade. I
> did
> tighten it probably too tight, not wanting it to loosen during use. And when
> I
> removed the blade, the warpage definitely lessened at least to the point where
> the teeth made contact with the table when resting flat on either side.
> 3) My arbor washer is incorrect for the arbor on my unisaw. The diameter of
> the arbor is 2.5" and makes contact with the blade only on its perimeter. The
> diameter of my arbor washer is only 1 7/8". So when I overtightened the arbor
> nut, the smaller arbor washer cause the whole damn blade to cup into the
> arbor,
> making a dish shape. Shouldn't the arbor washer be the same size diameter as
> the arbor?
>
> Thanks for any suggestions,
> Greg
> Greg

bb

"bowhunter"

in reply to [email protected] (GBannish) on 11/01/2005 2:05 AM

10/01/2005 8:43 PM

The arbor washer and arbor should have the same diameter

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to [email protected] (GBannish) on 11/01/2005 2:05 AM

11/01/2005 3:38 AM

On 11 Jan 2005 02:05:01 GMT, [email protected] (GBannish) wrote:

>1) The blade sucks, never was flat, and I need to spend $100 to get a real
>blade.

Freuds work for most people.

>2) I overtightened the arbor nut and introduced the warp into the blade.

Not possible.

For one thing, look into blade manufacture and the pre-stressing
(wrong term but it's 4am and I'm tired) that's deliberately introduced
with a honking great roller.


>3) My arbor washer is incorrect for the arbor on my unisaw. The diameter of
>the arbor is 2.5" and makes contact with the blade only on its perimeter. The
>diameter of my arbor washer is only 1 7/8".

Generally arbors are relieved to only make contact around the edge.
Your washer _must_ match this contact area, or you're screwed. I'm no
Unisaw expert, but that sounds broken.


4) You overheated it and warped it that way.

--
Smert' spamionam


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