Anyone got a suggestions for cutting 6-8mm thick perspex

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Carlow52

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Have access to a load of post covid screens which will need to be trimmed. The ens pieces wont be that big but useful for a glass house: i might end up with 200 plus pieces so need to be able to cut at scale.
Nothing on youtube gives me confidence.
Thanks as always
 
If its normal perspex then band or table saw no problem as long as you keep it guided and firmly bedded down on the table as you cut, or it gets snatched and can break
 
Don't use the skill saw. The blade spins very fast and you have a good chance of melting the plastic. If you have a fret saw or fine tooth pull saw (Japanese type) this would be better.
 
I think it would be worthwhile borrowing, or taking it to a table saw .

I cut up quite a bit of perspex/acrylic a while back.

I ran a piece of twelve mm plywood across the table top and fixed it to form a zero clearance, then cut the perspex like it was wood, I didn't feed it too fast and it worked perfectly
 
I ran a piece of twelve mm plywood across the table top and fixed it to form a zero clearance...

As you say, some sort of zero clearance setup is useful, as perspex can chip when the blade tooth exits the material. Masking tape along the cut line is a minimum example of this.

An air blast to remove the chips rather than mix and melt them back into the cut is a good idea.
 
Have access to a load of post covid screens which will need to be trimmed. The ens pieces wont be that big but useful for a glass house: i might end up with 200 plus pieces so need to be able to cut at scale.
Nothing on youtube gives me confidence.
Thanks as always
I'm a total newbie here. I've recently cut some 4mm perspex. For shed windows. Slightly smaller than 300x300mm. Accurately and without mishap.

I used a sliding mitre saw with a Saxton "fine wood" 255mm 80T blade.

My perspex cut

I chose this from the various methods used on YouTube - mainly because of the blade. A table saw I'm sure would be fine as well, and I do have a table saw as well - but the important thing is that you need a decent blade fitted - not a 32T or 40T blade as fitted to my table.

You can also use the "score" method and break the perspex off at the score by clamping the score line to the square edge of a solid table and using a firm straight edge clamped on top of the perspex. I was hesitant to do this myself because it looked "risky" - although I have no firm evidence that it would be - and it seemed a dependable technique when used by the expert!
 
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