cc

"chris"

21/09/2006 5:54 PM

I need some HELP ! ! !

Guys,

I am starting my first project. I am very familiar with tools for
building but I'm doing my first nice piece. I have Cherry, Black
Walnut, and some Curly Maple. I need to know what kind (what number of
teeth) of saw blade I should use to cut this stuff.

I need to rip theses 6" boards into 2 3/4 wide boards. I have been
looking at a lot of tools and could use the help of someone more
experienced than me. I would like to eventually work my way up to nice
furniture.

If you can help shoot me an email at [email protected] or post the
help on in the group.

I will take all the help anyone can give.

Thanks to all ! ! ! !


This topic has 8 replies

JP

"Jay Pique"

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

21/09/2006 6:02 PM


chris wrote:
> I need to rip theses 6" boards into 2 3/4 wide boards. I have been
> looking at a lot of tools and could use the help of someone more
> experienced than me.

For that you'll want a dedicated rip-saw. I recommend the Extrema
XG-12 series.

JP

JP

"Jay Pique"

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

21/09/2006 6:03 PM


chris wrote:
<snip>

The first tool you'll want to look into is a table saw (TS). This will
allow you to rip your boards and do all sorts of other things once you
gain experience. Buy the best you can afford.

JP

bb

"boorite"

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

21/09/2006 6:07 PM


Jay Pique wrote:
> chris wrote:
> > I need to rip theses 6" boards into 2 3/4 wide boards. I have been
> > looking at a lot of tools and could use the help of someone more
> > experienced than me.
>
> For that you'll want a dedicated rip-saw. I recommend the Extrema
> XG-12 series.

What a piece of crap!

R

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

22/09/2006 7:51 PM

I've been trying to find the answer to a similar question - but for a
jigsaw. I have a nice Dewalt Jigsaw, and have never had a problem on
less dense hardwoods, but I find I'm burning through blades cutting a
cherry 1x with some curves. Suggestions?

thanks,
Rich


C&S wrote:
> Chris,
>
> I agree with leuf and Jay. The right tool for the job is a table saw
> equipped with a combination blade.
>
> However, You question raises some flags....
>
>
> > I am starting my first project. I am very familiar with tools for
> > building but I'm doing my first nice piece.
>
> I'm unclear what that "building" means in this context.... framing?
>
> >I have Cherry, Black
> > Walnut, and some Curly Maple.
>
> Save the nice woods for a later project. Woodworking skills are
> *evolutionary*; your first project will have some aspects with which you
> will not be happy. By project 2 or 3 you will figure out how to
> solve/prevent/fix those problems.
>
> If the solution is not apparent, ask here; we'll help.
>
> Start simple, start in pine (cheap materials).
>
> > I need to know what kind (what number of
> > teeth) of saw blade I should use to cut this stuff.
>
> > I need to rip theses 6" boards into 2 3/4 wide boards. I have been
> > looking at a lot of tools and could use the help of someone more
> > experienced than me. I would like to eventually work my way up to nice
> > furniture.
>
> You have come to the right place. This is what we do.
>
> > If you can help shoot me an email at [email protected] or post the
> > help on in the group.
>
> Is is generally considered better ettiquette to respond here so that other
> folks can benefit from the discussussion.
>
> >
> > I will take all the help anyone can give.
> >
>
> Hint: really well formed questions (context and specifics) will generate the
> most meaningful answers, and Google is you friend.
>
> Cheers,
>
> Steve

Cc

"Charley"

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

23/09/2006 4:28 PM

Rick,

Slow the cutting speed and use a blade with a heavier tooth set. Cherry is
one of the hard woods that burns very easily from blade friction. Let the
saw do the work. Don't rush it by trying to cut too fast. A little paraffin
wax frequently rubbed on the sides of the blade will help too.

--
Charley

<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I've been trying to find the answer to a similar question - but for a
> jigsaw. I have a nice Dewalt Jigsaw, and have never had a problem on
> less dense hardwoods, but I find I'm burning through blades cutting a
> cherry 1x with some curves. Suggestions?
>
> thanks,
> Rich
>
>
> C&S wrote:
> > Chris,
> >
> > I agree with leuf and Jay. The right tool for the job is a table saw
> > equipped with a combination blade.
> >
> > However, You question raises some flags....
> >
> >
> > > I am starting my first project. I am very familiar with tools for
> > > building but I'm doing my first nice piece.
> >
> > I'm unclear what that "building" means in this context.... framing?
> >
> > >I have Cherry, Black
> > > Walnut, and some Curly Maple.
> >
> > Save the nice woods for a later project. Woodworking skills are
> > *evolutionary*; your first project will have some aspects with which you
> > will not be happy. By project 2 or 3 you will figure out how to
> > solve/prevent/fix those problems.
> >
> > If the solution is not apparent, ask here; we'll help.
> >
> > Start simple, start in pine (cheap materials).
> >
> > > I need to know what kind (what number of
> > > teeth) of saw blade I should use to cut this stuff.
> >
> > > I need to rip theses 6" boards into 2 3/4 wide boards. I have been
> > > looking at a lot of tools and could use the help of someone more
> > > experienced than me. I would like to eventually work my way up to
nice
> > > furniture.
> >
> > You have come to the right place. This is what we do.
> >
> > > If you can help shoot me an email at [email protected] or post
the
> > > help on in the group.
> >
> > Is is generally considered better ettiquette to respond here so that
other
> > folks can benefit from the discussussion.
> >
> > >
> > > I will take all the help anyone can give.
> > >
> >
> > Hint: really well formed questions (context and specifics) will generate
the
> > most meaningful answers, and Google is you friend.
> >
> > Cheers,
> >
> > Steve
>

MW

"Mark Warsaw"

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

24/09/2006 12:22 PM

Leuf <[email protected]> wrote:

> I'm assuming you have a 10" table saw. A good combination blade is
> all you need, it will have 40-50 teeth. A dedicated ripping blade
> would have 24-30 teeth and would cut faster but not better.

I'll second that. I recently picked up one of the Rigid combination
blades (10" x 50T) from Home Depot. I don't remember the exact price
but seems like it was in the $40 ball park (might have been on sale).
But it's been cutting very nicely--especially for the price.

Here's more info about the blade:

http://www.ridgid.com/Tools/Combination-Saw-Blade/

Ll

Leuf

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

21/09/2006 9:35 PM

On 21 Sep 2006 17:54:59 -0700, "chris" <[email protected]> wrote:

>Guys,
>
>I am starting my first project. I am very familiar with tools for
>building but I'm doing my first nice piece. I have Cherry, Black
>Walnut, and some Curly Maple. I need to know what kind (what number of
>teeth) of saw blade I should use to cut this stuff.
>
>I need to rip theses 6" boards into 2 3/4 wide boards. I have been
>looking at a lot of tools and could use the help of someone more
>experienced than me. I would like to eventually work my way up to nice
>furniture.

I'm assuming you have a 10" table saw. A good combination blade is
all you need, it will have 40-50 teeth. A dedicated ripping blade
would have 24-30 teeth and would cut faster but not better.


-Leuf

Cs

"C&S"

in reply to "chris" on 21/09/2006 5:54 PM

22/09/2006 4:31 PM

Chris,

I agree with leuf and Jay. The right tool for the job is a table saw
equipped with a combination blade.

However, You question raises some flags....


> I am starting my first project. I am very familiar with tools for
> building but I'm doing my first nice piece.

I'm unclear what that "building" means in this context.... framing?

>I have Cherry, Black
> Walnut, and some Curly Maple.

Save the nice woods for a later project. Woodworking skills are
*evolutionary*; your first project will have some aspects with which you
will not be happy. By project 2 or 3 you will figure out how to
solve/prevent/fix those problems.

If the solution is not apparent, ask here; we'll help.

Start simple, start in pine (cheap materials).

> I need to know what kind (what number of
> teeth) of saw blade I should use to cut this stuff.

> I need to rip theses 6" boards into 2 3/4 wide boards. I have been
> looking at a lot of tools and could use the help of someone more
> experienced than me. I would like to eventually work my way up to nice
> furniture.

You have come to the right place. This is what we do.

> If you can help shoot me an email at [email protected] or post the
> help on in the group.

Is is generally considered better ettiquette to respond here so that other
folks can benefit from the discussussion.

>
> I will take all the help anyone can give.
>

Hint: really well formed questions (context and specifics) will generate the
most meaningful answers, and Google is you friend.

Cheers,

Steve



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