KL

"Ken Lamb"

04/01/2004 7:20 PM

(Info Req.) 9" Saw blades

Greetings,
I have searched google before posting this in REC archives, tha latest post
was 2000. Are 9" carbide tipped saw blades stll available?
I just purchased a Rockwell Super 900 radial arm saw in mint, I mean mint
condition. it came with the orginal base with 4 casters and lock downs, and
a dado set.
He only used regular blades. I am looking for a 50ish tooth cross cut blade
if high quality, thin kerf not necessary.
Happy new year and TIA,
Ken


This topic has 4 replies

BA

"Bruce Adams"

in reply to "Ken Lamb" on 04/01/2004 7:20 PM

05/01/2004 1:09 AM

Go to Amazon and search for:
Freud LU88R009 9" 54-Tooth Industrial Thin Kerf Perma-SHIELD Coated Crosscut
Blade
I'd have pasted a link but it looked like so much gobbledy-gook. $50 for the
blade, and they have other 9" blades as well.
Bruce

"Ken Lamb" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Greetings,
> I have searched google before posting this in REC archives, tha latest
post
> was 2000. Are 9" carbide tipped saw blades stll available?
> I just purchased a Rockwell Super 900 radial arm saw in mint, I mean mint
> condition. it came with the orginal base with 4 casters and lock downs,
and
> a dado set.
> He only used regular blades. I am looking for a 50ish tooth cross cut
blade
> if high quality, thin kerf not necessary.
> Happy new year and TIA,
> Ken
>
>

BA

"Bruce Adams"

in reply to "Ken Lamb" on 04/01/2004 7:20 PM

05/01/2004 1:39 AM

Huh! I'd avoided the service, thinking the links must eventually expire, but
I looked on their site and they claim the links don't expire. The Amazon
page came out as http://tinyurl.com/2lnao which is certainly short enough. I
wonder if they use an encoding sheme? It doesn't seem reasonable that they'd
maintain a humongous database of randomly assigned shortcuts for free.
Thanks Roy!
Bruce

"Roy Smith" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In article <[email protected]>,
> "Bruce Adams" <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I'd have pasted a link but it looked like so much gobbledy-gook.
>
> Go to www.tinyurl.com, cut and paste the gobbledy-gook into the box, and
> follow the directions from there. Pretty cool.

RS

Roy Smith

in reply to "Ken Lamb" on 04/01/2004 7:20 PM

04/01/2004 9:04 PM

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

> Huh! I'd avoided the service, thinking the links must eventually expire, but
> I looked on their site and they claim the links don't expire. The Amazon
> page came out as http://tinyurl.com/2lnao which is certainly short enough. I
> wonder if they use an encoding sheme?

I don't know for sure, but I suspect the links are just sequential
indicies. They used to be 4 characters long, but all the ones I've seen
recently are 5. I just tried tinyurl.com/1, tinyurl.com/2, and
tinyurl.com/3 and they all work.

> It doesn't seem reasonable that they'd
> maintain a humongous database of randomly assigned shortcuts for free.

While the concept is pretty simple, it still takes a fair amount of
resources to build a production service like this. I can only assume
that somebody's got some plan to make money off this at some point in
the future, but for now, I'm happy to take advantage of it.

RS

Roy Smith

in reply to "Ken Lamb" on 04/01/2004 7:20 PM

04/01/2004 8:28 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
"Bruce Adams" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'd have pasted a link but it looked like so much gobbledy-gook.

Go to www.tinyurl.com, cut and paste the gobbledy-gook into the box, and
follow the directions from there. Pretty cool.


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