Rhyolith
Established Member
I friend wants to know how to re-tesion panel saws (if they get bent or other wise damaged).
Does anyone know how this is done?
Does anyone know how this is done?
Rhyolith":t1zlfxnb said:I friend wants to know how to re-tesion panel saws (if they get bent or other wise damaged).
Does anyone know how this is done?
Rhyolith":2jj0uc3b said:My friend thinks there is some kind of "trade secret" to re-tensioning the blade of panel saws (Dissitons usually the subject of the conversation), by re-tensioning I think he means stifferning the saw along its back by stressing the metal to strench the cutting part out (imagine like a coping saw). Apparently a similar thing is done with circular saws, but I have no expierence of that.
Thats exactly what I was trying to state earlier. As thinking about it, it's the only logical way I could think of to make the blade mechanically stiffer... short of some metallurgical magic I don't understand yet I can see it being difficult to achieve (maybe impossible) to tension the blade in this way without cause it to go all over the place (bend), but maybe if the central portion of the blade (the strip between the back and the cutting edge) were not tensioned and the back was this would keep it straight? I am imagining it working like a hacksaw with is sprung back and tort blade, just in one sheet of steel... mechanically I don't see why I would not work.AndyT":e4a83mrq said:It likened the saw plate to a piece of paper hung up by its top edge, with the teeth along that edge. To have any chance of cutting, the fingers holding the paper need to stretch that edge so it goes taut. This is achieved, so the book said, by hammering the metal behind the edge so it is trying to be longer than the edge, with the result that the edge goes stiff.
This seems to treat saw tensioning as a real thing, but I have only read the 1st page so far (slow reader). Thanks for the link Stanford, its more or less exactly what I was after I am very interested to find out whether saw tensioning is myth or reality now though.CStanford":e4a83mrq said:http://www.wkfinetools.com/tRestore/saw/strSawBlade/strSawBlade1.asp
CStanford":f2q42azb said:Now follows "Tensioning." In this the blades are hammered so that they shall not be too "fast" or too "loose;'' but shall possess the proper tension, spring or character. If the blade is what is termed "fast" the metal is too long on the edge and needs expanding through the centre, or, if too "loose" the metal must be stretched on the edge. A saw not properly tensioned will run out of its course, in other words it will not cut straight and true. "
CStanford":3dmewahv said:"...but shall possess the proper tension, spring or character..." Seems to indicate something other than just the removal of bulges or making the plate flat.
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