I need to cut some 61/2" diameter circles out of 3/4" stock. I have a Jet
14" bandsaw. I know there are many places where a quick and easy circle
cutting jig for a bandsaw has been published. However, I can't locate any
diagrams in the back issues of magazines I currently have or on the web.
Can someone direct me to a site where the jig is illustrated?
Dustmaker wrote:
> I need to cut some 61/2" diameter circles out of 3/4" stock. I have a Jet
> 14" bandsaw. I know there are many places where a quick and easy circle
> cutting jig for a bandsaw has been published. However, I can't locate any
> diagrams in the back issues of magazines I currently have or on the web.
> Can someone direct me to a site where the jig is illustrated?
I don't have any pictures offhand, but a google search produced this,
among others.
http://home.comcast.net/~kvaughn65/circle_jig2.jpg
This pictures isn't even exactly what I had in mind. I just made a
strip that fit in the miter guage slot, and attached a large piece of
ply to this strip. The ply functions as a "sub-table", and I put a
small nail up through the bottom of the ply, at (radius) inches from
the front of the blade. Then put the center of the workpiece on the
nail, feed it into the blade, and spin the workpiece until the circle
is cut. Much harder to explain than to make - I can probably snap a
photo if you really need one. If you don't already have a bandsaw book
(i.e. Duginske), I'd highly recommend one - good not only for jigs etc,
but also for setup, tuning, blade selection, etc.
Good luck,
Andy
Andy wrote:
> Dustmaker wrote:
> > I need to cut some 61/2" diameter circles out of 3/4" stock. I have a Jet
> > 14" bandsaw. I know there are many places where a quick and easy circle
> > cutting jig for a bandsaw has been published. However, I can't locate any
> > diagrams in the back issues of magazines I currently have or on the web.
> > Can someone direct me to a site where the jig is illustrated?
>
>
> I Made a jig from a 1/2" piece of ply, that has a runner that runs in the miter slot.
It has a stop block, on the bottom, that stops the front edge of the
jig at the front edge of the table. With the jig against the stop
block, put in a nail, or other pivot, to the right of the blade, equal
to the radius of the cut.
To cut, place a rough cut disc on the pivot, and feed the jig with
material, into the blade, until the jig hits the stop block. Then, just
turn the material to cut the disc.
It works gteat, and even better on a router table! Have fun, make
sawdust
In article <[email protected]>,
Dustmaker <[email protected]> wrote:
>I need to cut some 61/2" diameter circles out of 3/4" stock. I have a Jet
>14" bandsaw. I know there are many places where a quick and easy circle
>cutting jig for a bandsaw has been published. However, I can't locate any
>diagrams in the back issues of magazines I currently have or on the web.
>Can someone direct me to a site where the jig is illustrated?
>
>
Is this supposed to be a joke?
--
[email protected]
SDF Public Access UNIX System - http://sdf.lonestar.org
"sailor" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> To cut, place a rough cut disc on the pivot, and feed the jig with
> material, into the blade, until the jig hits the stop block. Then, just
> turn the material to cut the disc.
>
> It works gteat, and even better on a router table! Have fun, make
> sawdust
>
Same thing on a disk sander with a miter gage groove, though the use of an
eighth inch pin in a quarter inch hole helps keep you from burning the edge
as you advance the jig.
On the bandsaw, you don't need a rough cut, as you are making your entry cut
as you advance the jig to the stop.
Google "bandsaw circle jig" 34,500+ hits.
On Sat, 25 Nov 2006 19:04:03 -0600, "Dustmaker" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I need to cut some 61/2" diameter circles out of 3/4" stock. I have a Jet
>14" bandsaw. I know there are many places where a quick and easy circle
>cutting jig for a bandsaw has been published. However, I can't locate any
>diagrams in the back issues of magazines I currently have or on the web.
>Can someone direct me to a site where the jig is illustrated?
>