bb

"bob"

29/02/2004 7:06 PM

HARD wood! Need blade suggestion

I bought some Brazilian redwood, also known as massaranduba, the other day.
This stuff is hard - three times as hard as red oak. When I drill a pilot
hole, the wood and the bit (new bit) burn. When I cut this stuff (1x6) with
my miter saw, I can smell burning. The saw has a new Diablo 40 tooth
carbide tipped blade.

Any suggestions on drill bits and saw blades designed for super hard wood
such as this? I've got 250 BF of this stuff for a project. Bits and blades
will cost more than the wood!

Thanks.

Bob


This topic has 7 replies

Nn

Nova

in reply to "bob" on 29/02/2004 7:06 PM

29/02/2004 9:33 PM

Leon wrote:

> I cut, and resaw 2" thick Ipe very often with a Forrest WW II 40 tooth reg
> kerf and a cabinet saw. No burning. I understand that Ipe is known by
> many names and is from Mexico and South America. The picture of your
> massaranduba looks a lot like Ipe. Does you wood have a lot of yellow dust?
> Any way Ipe has a hardness scale of 3670 compared to Red Oak at 1290, so Ipe
> is about 3 times as hard as Oak also. I rebuilt 3 park benches using Ipe
> and drilled about 76, 1/4" holes using a brad point bit with no problem with
> burning. I also route hundreds of 3/8" wide through slots 1.75" long in
> 3/8" think Ipe. The slots are stopped on both ends and I do quite often
> witness some burning during this operation. I suspect you feed rate may be
> too slow if you are getting burning.

Form the chart I could find:

http://www.mdsd.co.za/tech_characteristics.htm

Massaranduba has a Janka hardness of 3190. The chart says, "Easy to work &
saw. Rated good to excellent for all operations."

--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
(Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply)

Nn

Nova

in reply to "bob" on 29/02/2004 7:06 PM

29/02/2004 10:11 PM

Jim Wilson wrote:

> Say, Leon, where do you get 2" thick Ipe? Seems everywhere around here
> only has 5/4. :-(
>
> Jim

The supplier here carries it in up to 4" x 10" planks and 7" x 7" posts.

--
Jack Novak
Buffalo, NY - USA
(Remove "SPAM" from email address to reply)

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "bob" on 29/02/2004 7:06 PM

01/03/2004 4:44 AM

Yeah, Bob I see from Jack's post your wood is not Ipe and is in the 3190
range, about 15% softer than Ipe. I find that with these hard woods that
clean blades are a must as the buildup can cause excess friction at the
teeth. I have to keep my router bits spic and span to prevent burning when
cutting slots in Ipe. Consider also that if your saw motor is not up to the
task and cuts slower you may be building up too much heat from the slow feed
rate. I do not often recommend a thin kerf blade but this may help if your
feed rate is slow enough to cause burning

I don't suggest using the WWII on you miter saw either. Wrong blade for
that saw.

Since your thin kerf blade on your circle saw does ok, I again suspect that
your feed rate is too slow with your miter saw.



JW

Jim Wilson

in reply to "bob" on 29/02/2004 7:06 PM

01/03/2004 2:53 AM

Leon wrote...
> I cut, and resaw 2" thick Ipe very often with a Forrest WW II 40 tooth reg
> kerf and a cabinet saw.

Say, Leon, where do you get 2" thick Ipe? Seems everywhere around here
only has 5/4. :-(

Jim

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "bob" on 29/02/2004 7:06 PM

01/03/2004 4:23 AM

Jim, I actually take 5.5-6" wide 5/4 Ipe and plane the sides smooth. I buy
an 8' board and cut it in half. Then I rip those 2 pieces in to 2" wide
pieces. I turn those pieces on edge and resaw them on the TS and then plane
them down in to 3/8" thick pieces.
I buy my Ipe at Hardwood Lumber. I don't recall if they have any thicker
stuff in the back ware house or not.


"Jim Wilson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:MPG.1aac537bff78e07198980b@localhost...
> Leon wrote...
> > I cut, and resaw 2" thick Ipe very often with a Forrest WW II 40 tooth
reg
> > kerf and a cabinet saw.
>
> Say, Leon, where do you get 2" thick Ipe? Seems everywhere around here
> only has 5/4. :-(
>
> Jim

bb

"bob"

in reply to "bob" on 29/02/2004 7:06 PM

29/02/2004 8:50 PM

It's not ipe. I researched this stuff before I bought it, and I believe
it's massaranduba. The wood is red in color as is the sawdust.

I'll have to try a brad point bit. And swap out my WWII from the table saw
to the miter - boards are 14 feet long and HEAVY. My DeWalt circ saw with
DeWalt thin kerf slices right through it.

Thanks for the suggestions.

Bob
"Leon" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I cut, and resaw 2" thick Ipe very often with a Forrest WW II 40 tooth reg
> kerf and a cabinet saw. No burning. I understand that Ipe is known by
> many names and is from Mexico and South America. The picture of your
> massaranduba looks a lot like Ipe. Does you wood have a lot of yellow
dust?
> Any way Ipe has a hardness scale of 3670 compared to Red Oak at 1290, so
Ipe
> is about 3 times as hard as Oak also. I rebuilt 3 park benches using Ipe
> and drilled about 76, 1/4" holes using a brad point bit with no problem
with
> burning. I also route hundreds of 3/8" wide through slots 1.75" long in
> 3/8" think Ipe. The slots are stopped on both ends and I do quite often
> witness some burning during this operation. I suspect you feed rate may
be
> too slow if you are getting burning.
>
> "bob" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
> > I bought some Brazilian redwood, also known as massaranduba, the other
> day.
> > This stuff is hard - three times as hard as red oak. When I drill a
pilot
> > hole, the wood and the bit (new bit) burn. When I cut this stuff (1x6)
> with
> > my miter saw, I can smell burning. The saw has a new Diablo 40 tooth
> > carbide tipped blade.
> >
> > Any suggestions on drill bits and saw blades designed for super hard
wood
> > such as this? I've got 250 BF of this stuff for a project. Bits and
> blades
> > will cost more than the wood!
> >
> > Thanks.
> >
> > Bob
> >
> >
>
>

Lr

"Leon"

in reply to "bob" on 29/02/2004 7:06 PM

01/03/2004 2:20 AM

I cut, and resaw 2" thick Ipe very often with a Forrest WW II 40 tooth reg
kerf and a cabinet saw. No burning. I understand that Ipe is known by
many names and is from Mexico and South America. The picture of your
massaranduba looks a lot like Ipe. Does you wood have a lot of yellow dust?
Any way Ipe has a hardness scale of 3670 compared to Red Oak at 1290, so Ipe
is about 3 times as hard as Oak also. I rebuilt 3 park benches using Ipe
and drilled about 76, 1/4" holes using a brad point bit with no problem with
burning. I also route hundreds of 3/8" wide through slots 1.75" long in
3/8" think Ipe. The slots are stopped on both ends and I do quite often
witness some burning during this operation. I suspect you feed rate may be
too slow if you are getting burning.

"bob" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I bought some Brazilian redwood, also known as massaranduba, the other
day.
> This stuff is hard - three times as hard as red oak. When I drill a pilot
> hole, the wood and the bit (new bit) burn. When I cut this stuff (1x6)
with
> my miter saw, I can smell burning. The saw has a new Diablo 40 tooth
> carbide tipped blade.
>
> Any suggestions on drill bits and saw blades designed for super hard wood
> such as this? I've got 250 BF of this stuff for a project. Bits and
blades
> will cost more than the wood!
>
> Thanks.
>
> Bob
>
>


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