I'm in the process of doing some upgrades to my 20 year old Delta contractor
saw. One of the things I want to do is replace the cast pulleys with
machined ones. Looked at the set that In-line Industries sells According to
the company most blades spin at about 3450 rpm. They recommend running the
blade at 3800 rpm. Does anybody have any thoughts or experience on running
at the higher speed? Better, worse, or is there no notable difference?
Oswin
Is there something wrong with your die cast pulleys? If they have been
working for 20 years why change them now? Seems to me you are just
increasing the load on the bearings.
--
Roger Shoaf
About the time I had mastered getting the toothpaste back in the tube, then
they come up with this striped stuff.
"oswin556" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:kOzUg.1992$uJ2.1396@dukeread03...
> I'm in the process of doing some upgrades to my 20 year old Delta
contractor
> saw. One of the things I want to do is replace the cast pulleys with
> machined ones. Looked at the set that In-line Industries sells According
to
> the company most blades spin at about 3450 rpm. They recommend running the
> blade at 3800 rpm. Does anybody have any thoughts or experience on running
> at the higher speed? Better, worse, or is there no notable difference?
>
>
>
> Oswin
>
>
>
oswin556 wrote:
> Looked at the set that In-line Industries sells According to
> the company most blades spin at about 3450 rpm. They recommend running the
> blade at 3800 rpm.
Saw blades are designed for a specific tooth loading. Increasing the
blade speed means you would need to feed the wood faster to match.
However, that's only about a 10% difference. You probably cause more
variation than that just pushing the wood through by hand.
My guess is no real difference. The cynic in me says that they probably
make those pulleys for other purposes, or can source them cheaply.
Chris
Circular saw blades are tensioned to run at a rim speed of approx 10,000
FTM.
That equates to 3819 RPM on a 10" blade
"oswin556" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:kOzUg.1992$uJ2.1396@dukeread03...
> I'm in the process of doing some upgrades to my 20 year old Delta
contractor
> saw. One of the things I want to do is replace the cast pulleys with
> machined ones. Looked at the set that In-line Industries sells According
to
> the company most blades spin at about 3450 rpm. They recommend running the
> blade at 3800 rpm. Does anybody have any thoughts or experience on running
> at the higher speed? Better, worse, or is there no notable difference?
>
>
>
> Oswin
>
>
>
"oswin556" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:kOzUg.1992$uJ2.1396@dukeread03...
> I'm in the process of doing some upgrades to my 20 year old Delta
> contractor
> saw. One of the things I want to do is replace the cast pulleys with
> machined ones. Looked at the set that In-line Industries sells According
> to
> the company most blades spin at about 3450 rpm. They recommend running the
> blade at 3800 rpm. Does anybody have any thoughts or experience on running
> at the higher speed? Better, worse, or is there no notable difference?
>
>
>
> Oswin
>
>
Contact the manufacturer of your blade and ask them.
"oswin556" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:kOzUg.1992$uJ2.1396@dukeread03...
> I'm in the process of doing some upgrades to my 20 year old Delta
> contractor
> saw. One of the things I want to do is replace the cast pulleys with
> machined ones. Looked at the set that In-line Industries sells According
> to
> the company most blades spin at about 3450 rpm. They recommend running the
> blade at 3800 rpm. Does anybody have any thoughts or experience on running
> at the higher speed? Better, worse, or is there no notable difference?
>
>
>
> Oswin
This one is 3000 rpm
http://www.deltamachinery.com/index.asp?e=136&p=6086
This one has more HP and is 4000 rpm
http://www.deltamachinery.com/index.asp?e=136&p=6155
This one is 3450 rpm
http://www.deltamachinery.com/index.asp?e=136&p=5222
I doubt it would be a problem and for thin stock could help the feed rate,
but unless you increase the power, it will not help on the 3" thick maple.