Ba

"BG250"

20/01/2005 8:02 AM

Panel saw kit

http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html

Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I saw this kit.
Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever built one? Is
this company reliable?
Thanks


This topic has 7 replies

Ba

"BG250"

in reply to "BG250" on 20/01/2005 8:02 AM

20/01/2005 2:50 PM

"mac davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0500, "BG250" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html
> >
> >Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I saw this
kit.
> >Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever built one?
Is
> >this company reliable?
> >Thanks
> >
> I haven't built that one, but have made 2 panel saws in the past...
> they can be as simple as a sheet of plywood with a frame and a couple
> of pieces of pipe with a skill saw mounted on it.. and very accurate..
>
> We used to build office "hot file" holders and could never get the
> lumber yard to cut the shelves square, so we took a day and built our
> own panel saw..
>
>
> mac
>
> Please remove splinters before emailing

I was considering building the whole thing myself as well. The pipe is a
good idea. I just have to figure a way to make a glide the saw can run on
smoothly down the rail (pipe). The acrylic blade may be the most expensive
part of the whole thing!
bg

md

mac davis

in reply to "BG250" on 20/01/2005 8:02 AM

20/01/2005 8:26 AM

On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0500, "BG250" <[email protected]> wrote:

>http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html
>
>Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I saw this kit.
>Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever built one? Is
>this company reliable?
>Thanks
>
I haven't built that one, but have made 2 panel saws in the past...
they can be as simple as a sheet of plywood with a frame and a couple
of pieces of pipe with a skill saw mounted on it.. and very accurate..

We used to build office "hot file" holders and could never get the
lumber yard to cut the shelves square, so we took a day and built our
own panel saw..


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

jn

"jeff"

in reply to "BG250" on 20/01/2005 8:02 AM

21/01/2005 6:07 AM

Yep, I made it. Here is my reply to the original post on 1/7/05:

I made this one:

http://store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html

It is a little cheaper and works well for me. The removable wings are
handy, and it folds back against the wall and only sticks out about 6". I
also have another friend who made the same one. Together, we problably made
about every mistake possible, so if you decide to go with the same plans, I
can probably tell you what not to do.

The main issue seems to be the track that the panel rests on and slides on
while being cut. My friend told me that his was a little tough to push
through, and even with the rabbets had a tendency to gather sawdust. So I
had the bright idea to mount skateboard wheels instead of the wood strip his
uses. I have yet to get them all perfectly aligned (for a number of
reasons) and am thinking of redoing it and going with a wood strip with
teflon on top. If you're interested, I'll look around and see if I can find
the plans.....

Jeff

"makesawdust" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> BG250 Wrote:
> > "mac davis" [email protected] wrote in message
> > news:[email protected]
> > On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0500, "BG250" [email protected] wrote:
> > -
> > http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html
> >
> > Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I saw
> > this--
> > kit.--
> > Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever built
> > one?--
> > Is--
> > this company reliable?
> > Thanks
> > -
> > I haven't built that one, but have made 2 panel saws in the past...
> > they can be as simple as a sheet of plywood with a frame and a couple
> > of pieces of pipe with a skill saw mounted on it.. and very
> > accurate..
> >
> > We used to build office "hot file" holders and could never get the
> > lumber yard to cut the shelves square, so we took a day and built our
> > own panel saw..
> >
> >
> > mac
> >
> > Please remove splinters before emailing-
> >
> > I was considering building the whole thing myself as well. The pipe is
> > a
> > good idea. I just have to figure a way to make a glide the saw can run
> > on
> > smoothly down the rail (pipe). The acrylic blade may be the most
> > expensive
> > part of the whole thing!
> > bg
>
> I've been toying with building one when I set up my shop in the new
> house we are building. I looked closely at the one at my local home
> depot, and it looks like you can use u-bolts with a bunch of washers on
> it - these would ride over the pipe. I was considering turning the
> washers on a pen madred from that high density slick plastic (can't
> remember the initials for it), then cutting them to thickness on a
> bandsaw.
>
>
> --
> makesawdust


md

mac davis

in reply to "BG250" on 20/01/2005 8:02 AM

26/01/2005 11:22 AM

On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 14:50:05 -0500, "BG250" <[email protected]> wrote:

>"mac davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
>news:[email protected]...
>> On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0500, "BG250" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html
>> >
>> >Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I saw this
>kit.
>> >Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever built one?
>Is
>> >this company reliable?
>> >Thanks
>> >
>> I haven't built that one, but have made 2 panel saws in the past...
>> they can be as simple as a sheet of plywood with a frame and a couple
>> of pieces of pipe with a skill saw mounted on it.. and very accurate..
>>
>> We used to build office "hot file" holders and could never get the
>> lumber yard to cut the shelves square, so we took a day and built our
>> own panel saw..
>>
>>
>> mac
>>
>> Please remove splinters before emailing
>
>I was considering building the whole thing myself as well. The pipe is a
>good idea. I just have to figure a way to make a glide the saw can run on
>smoothly down the rail (pipe). The acrylic blade may be the most expensive
>part of the whole thing!
>bg
>
it was a LONG time ago, but I seem to remember using muffler type U
bolts with the nuts on the saw base side and slices of teflon tubing
covering the U bolt (saddle bracket?) where it slid on the pipes..

I don't think that the track of the blade was adjustable... I think we
had a fixed fence/slide on the bottom and sort of a miter fence to set
the width...


mac

Please remove splinters before emailing

b

in reply to "BG250" on 20/01/2005 8:02 AM

21/01/2005 3:10 PM

On Fri, 21 Jan 2005 02:07:20 +0000, makesawdust
<[email protected]> wrote:

>
>BG250 Wrote:
>> "mac davis" [email protected] wrote in message
>> news:[email protected]
>> On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0500, "BG250" [email protected] wrote:
>> -
>> http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html
>>
>> Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I saw
>> this--
>> kit.--
>> Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever built
>> one?--
>> Is--
>> this company reliable?
>> Thanks
>> -
>> I haven't built that one, but have made 2 panel saws in the past...
>> they can be as simple as a sheet of plywood with a frame and a couple
>> of pieces of pipe with a skill saw mounted on it.. and very
>> accurate..
>>
>> We used to build office "hot file" holders and could never get the
>> lumber yard to cut the shelves square, so we took a day and built our
>> own panel saw..
>>
>>
>> mac
>>
>> Please remove splinters before emailing-
>>
>> I was considering building the whole thing myself as well. The pipe is
>> a
>> good idea. I just have to figure a way to make a glide the saw can run
>> on
>> smoothly down the rail (pipe). The acrylic blade may be the most
>> expensive
>> part of the whole thing!
>> bg
>
>I've been toying with building one when I set up my shop in the new
>house we are building. I looked closely at the one at my local home
>depot, and it looks like you can use u-bolts with a bunch of washers on
>it - these would ride over the pipe. I was considering turning the
>washers on a pen madred from that high density slick plastic (can't
>remember the initials for it), then cutting them to thickness on a
>bandsaw.


I used that method of building a cheap linear bearing for a project
once. I used a heavy Ubolt and some kind of nylon spacers from the
little bin drawers at ace hardware. it worked fine.

mm

makesawdust

in reply to "BG250" on 20/01/2005 8:02 AM

21/01/2005 2:07 AM


BG250 Wrote:
> "mac davis" [email protected] wrote in message
> news:[email protected]
> On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0500, "BG250" [email protected] wrote:
> -
> http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html
>
> Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I sa
> this--
> kit.--
> Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever buil
> one?--
> Is--
> this company reliable?
> Thanks
> -
> I haven't built that one, but have made 2 panel saws in the past...
> they can be as simple as a sheet of plywood with a frame and a couple
> of pieces of pipe with a skill saw mounted on it.. and ver
> accurate..
>
> We used to build office "hot file" holders and could never get the
> lumber yard to cut the shelves square, so we took a day and built our
> own panel saw..
>
>
> mac
>
> Please remove splinters before emailing-
>
> I was considering building the whole thing myself as well. The pipe i
> a
> good idea. I just have to figure a way to make a glide the saw can ru
> on
> smoothly down the rail (pipe). The acrylic blade may be the mos
> expensive
> part of the whole thing!
> bg

I've been toying with building one when I set up my shop in the ne
house we are building. I looked closely at the one at my local hom
depot, and it looks like you can use u-bolts with a bunch of washers o
it - these would ride over the pipe. I was considering turning th
washers on a pen madred from that high density slick plastic (can'
remember the initials for it), then cutting them to thickness on
bandsaw

--
makesawdust

PH

Peter Hyde

in reply to "BG250" on 20/01/2005 8:02 AM

20/01/2005 9:28 PM

In article <[email protected]>, "BG250" <[email protected]>
wrote:

> "mac davis" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 08:02:22 -0500, "BG250" <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > >http://shop.store.yahoo.com/woodsmithstore/panelsawkit.html
> > >
> > >Earlier, I was looking for a panel saw to cut acrylic sheet. I saw this
> kit.
> > >Looks like it would be a much lower cost solution. Anyone ever built one?
> Is
> > >this company reliable?
> > >Thanks
> > >
> > I haven't built that one, but have made 2 panel saws in the past...
> > they can be as simple as a sheet of plywood with a frame and a couple
> > of pieces of pipe with a skill saw mounted on it.. and very accurate..
> >
> > We used to build office "hot file" holders and could never get the
> > lumber yard to cut the shelves square, so we took a day and built our
> > own panel saw..
> >
> >
> > mac
> >
> > Please remove splinters before emailing
>
> I was considering building the whole thing myself as well. The pipe is a
> good idea. I just have to figure a way to make a glide the saw can run on
> smoothly down the rail (pipe). The acrylic blade may be the most expensive
> part of the whole thing!
> bg
For the glides you could use some blocks of UHMW plastic with
appropriate diameter hole drilled to suit pipe. Commercial panel saws
use muffler clamps with loose fibre washers all around the U part. The
washers rotate on the U and act as a bearing.

--
meet me at: http://www.peterhyde.bravehost.com/


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