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#11
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You might try Makita repair shops for parts. They are pretty good about replacement parts. CZ
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Jerry Roy |
#12
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Like several others have said above, a hand-held jigsaw can do a decent job if set up right. A few years back I had a run of published articles, and one was a tech article in Hometown Hot Rod magazine, vol 2 issue 9. Sadly, that magazine is no longer published. The article was titled "Plasma Substitute". In it, I made the argument that a hand-held jigsaw can be a suitable, but slower substitute for a plasma cutter. Some salient points: ....the sheet has to be secured somehow ....you have to use considerable down pressure on the saw, as it wants to bounce. make sure the saw is not set to orbit ...my article was written for cutting steel, I used several different brands of blades designated for steel, most were wavy set, like a hand-held hacksaw blade. For cutting aluminum, I would use coarser blades, and a dry lubricant to prevent tooth clogging. ... for 18 ga steel I used a 32 tpi blade and pushed my saw along at a rate of approximately 10 inches per minute ... for 1/8" steel I cut with an 18 tpi blade at 2 inches per minute ... for 3/16 steel I cut with a 12tpi blade at 2 inches per minute ... use enough forward pressure so that you see a constant chip being created, if you don't you are dulling the blade. if you do dull a blade-toss it ... a slow blade speed setting on your saw is absolutely essential....start out on the saw's slowest speed setting, then gradually increase ... as you experiment, you will find that faster blade speed gets to a point of too fast-where the chip doesn't have time to clear, and friction destroys blades. ... check your blade temp occasionally, the correct speed will only warm the blade, if too hot, you're too fast ... this is loud, and the tiny flying chips are hot, not enough to burn you, but if they land in an eye they are a double whammy, so eye and ear protection is advised ... Although those cutting times seem slow, there is some time gain on the cleanup side of the task. A jigsaw cuts with minimum distortion, there is a slight rough edge to clean. Generally a few swipes with a file cleans it up enough. ... A hand-held plasma on the other hand has some dross to clean, and the metal immediately next to the cut has been embrittled and that causes its own issues ... While the cut edge from a Beverly shear is very clean, the piece coming off the right side of the blades is often distorted with some curl I still don't have a plasma and buy scroll saw blades whenever I see them on sale.
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Mark from Illinois Last edited by weldtoride; 10-07-2017 at 04:43 PM. |
#13
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Nice I'll have a look at jigsaw blades today...
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#14
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Mark,
Thank you. Very good points, as I have cut a lot of 1/8 - and thinner steel sheet using the sabersaws. Drill 3 close-spaced 1/8" holes to start the cut inside the sheet. Drill two 5/16" holes at opposite corners and cut towards the blank corners for square-ish openings. As you say so accurately : I always pre-oil the cutline and then feel for the right blade speed. Heat is the enemy of blades. A sandbag or two on the sheet helps absorb the misc vibes of saw racket and saw chatter. I used to duct the saw's fan exhaust air with some metalwork and duct tape to blow the chips ahead of my cut - but now chip blowers are included with some, if not all, sabersaws .... (ps, any time I see a "new" hardware store I go looking at cutting stuff - saw blades of any sort, drills, snips .... you never know until you seek ... )
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Kent http://www.tinmantech.com "All it takes is a little practical experience to blow the he!! out of a perfectly good theory." --- Lloyd Rosenquist, charter member AWS, 1919. Last edited by crystallographic; 10-07-2017 at 12:52 PM. |
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Any thoughts on this. Can't seem to upload pic. 14 gauge princess auto metal shear nibbler, it got 4.7 stars out of 5 and 7 good reviews
Last edited by Murdoch; 10-08-2017 at 09:29 AM. |
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