bogmonster
Established Member
Hi,
At last I have a bandsaw. Paid a bit over the going rate but was fed up messing about. It's a vintage Startrite 352. I have not used a bandsaw before so just learning the basics. Main use will be cutting blanks in green wood for faceplate bowls. I have some of TuffSaws blades and the 3/8ths 3tpi wide set blade is working fine and dandy. I also have a 3/4 for straight cuts. I picked the saw up this morning and this afternoon played. I know have a pile of blanks in both labernum, sycamore and holly. The thickest wood I cut was the laburnum that just fitted under the guides (without removing the guard). Slow and steady feed - no issues.
Anyway, to the point of the post, I have done some research and still not sure how best to cut circles. My gut feel is that free hand without a jig will be best. That works fine where you have a piece of wood with parallel faces but wanting to get the most from the wood I tend to split down the pith and will end up with the varying height of the outer circumference (bark). I put the flat surface of the split log on the saw table but my issue is how to mark a circle on the massively uneven surface? If I just use dividers then I would end up with an oval. On mu first try I screwed a piece of round ply onto the top surface and just kept wide of that but I don't like that solution.
I am not that keen on a jig so wanted to know if there is an easy way to mark the blank circumference on the curved surface.
Apologies if this a really dumb question,
BM.
At last I have a bandsaw. Paid a bit over the going rate but was fed up messing about. It's a vintage Startrite 352. I have not used a bandsaw before so just learning the basics. Main use will be cutting blanks in green wood for faceplate bowls. I have some of TuffSaws blades and the 3/8ths 3tpi wide set blade is working fine and dandy. I also have a 3/4 for straight cuts. I picked the saw up this morning and this afternoon played. I know have a pile of blanks in both labernum, sycamore and holly. The thickest wood I cut was the laburnum that just fitted under the guides (without removing the guard). Slow and steady feed - no issues.
Anyway, to the point of the post, I have done some research and still not sure how best to cut circles. My gut feel is that free hand without a jig will be best. That works fine where you have a piece of wood with parallel faces but wanting to get the most from the wood I tend to split down the pith and will end up with the varying height of the outer circumference (bark). I put the flat surface of the split log on the saw table but my issue is how to mark a circle on the massively uneven surface? If I just use dividers then I would end up with an oval. On mu first try I screwed a piece of round ply onto the top surface and just kept wide of that but I don't like that solution.
I am not that keen on a jig so wanted to know if there is an easy way to mark the blank circumference on the curved surface.
Apologies if this a really dumb question,
BM.