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16/02/2004 12:01 AM

fww bandsaw blade review.. comments..

so anyone run out and buy some BC Saw blades?

this was only a limited scope review - 14" w/ riser, 1/2" resaw; but
BC Saw looks impressive - good speed, excellent flatness, and good
smoothness for $10; compared to Suffolk AS (vgood, vgood, fair) for
$19.

In my case, the priority would be flatness/smoothness and then a
distant 3rd speed.


This topic has 3 replies

tT

[email protected] (Tom Bergman)

in reply to [email protected] on 16/02/2004 12:01 AM

16/02/2004 7:54 AM

I curious to hear others reviews as well. Based on your email (I
haven't read article yet), the one thing they didn't address was
durability. The $10 blade is only a bargain if it lasts reasonably
long compared to the Timberwolf (more than half at any rate).

cC

[email protected] (Charlie Self)

in reply to [email protected] (Tom Bergman) on 16/02/2004 7:54 AM

16/02/2004 4:49 PM

Tom Bergman asks:

>I curious to hear others reviews as well. Based on your email (I
>haven't read article yet), the one thing they didn't address was
>durability. The $10 blade is only a bargain if it lasts reasonably
>long compared to the Timberwolf (more than half at any rate)

Durability tests would have been nice, but the time it would take to test each
blade to the point it loses its edge might be excessive in terms of article
cost. I'd like to have seen speed and price both placed after flatness and
smoothness, as they are both less important, but charting is often a guessing
game with your readers.

I'd also have liked to have seen some woods more likely to be used in thin
stock, either as veneers or as backing or facing or sides on instruments. Say
walnut, cherry (which has its own special needs), hard maple, some curly or
bird's eye maple. I know it's difficult to get consistent stock in any one
wood, but a single test in soft maple doesn't really tell you that much, IMO.

Hell, I cut some 6" wide chinaberry recently using an Olson MVP, and got
consistently excellent results, as I did with a 9" wide piece of red oak and
another of white oak. Of course, I was adjusting feed to suit the grain and the
wood itself, by hand, and I was using a single point guide clamped to the
table, with no fence, so whadda I know.

My personal opinion is that anyone who wants to check out the best in bandsaw
blades should locate the nearest really good luthier and ask him or her.

Charlie Self
"Health food makes me sick." Calvin Trillin

http://hometown.aol.com/charliediy/myhomepage/business.html

cb

charlie b

in reply to [email protected] (Tom Bergman) on 16/02/2004 7:54 AM

16/02/2004 7:26 PM

Did they review Laguna Tools Resaw King - carbide with special
depth of cut limiter design and special gullets for dragging
saw dust out of the kerf. Made specifically for resawing,
not to be used on cutting up logs/mini-logs/logettes.

I think Torben, the president and owner of LT either designed
the blades or was in on the design. He's a bandsaw freak
and loves cutting paper thin slices of 12 inch blocks of
cherry, maple etc.. Not cheap - about a dollar an inch,
$30+ to resharpen. For $130 for my LT16SEC I'll stick with
TimberWolf. The 1/2" resaws nicely Have a look

http://home.comcast.net/~charliebcz/Resawing1.html

- a fence that can be set for blade lead is essential.

charlie b


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