Tony, while I have never folded a saw spine, I have put new blades in a few old spines. If you are looking for the easiest way to build a saw, I would suggest looking for an old saw (or a cheap new saw) and using that spine. If, however, you want the experience of bending one, then go for it.
When I hear gent's saw, I think of a saw with a turned handle that is in line with the spine of the saw. If that is what you are trying to make, I think you might want to use a thinner brass for the spine. I have a few of these saws, and on all of them the brass is about 1/16" thick. The lighter weight is appropriate for this style of saw and will be significantly easier to bend.
If you go with a thinner brass, look for 260, not 360. 260 is much more ductile, and you have a better chance of bending it without having it crack.
woodbrains":236ifa3y said:
The best back saws had the back of the plate stretch hammered, and folding the brass back over it forced it back flat and in tension, so the blade would remain flatter in thinner plate dimensions.
Mike.
Mike, I have removed the spine from quite a few backsaws and never seen evidence of this being done. I'm not saying it wasn't (and most of the saws I work on are American), but all of the blades I see are flat when they are removed from the spine. If the blades were tensioned along the back, I would expect them to be concave in one direction or the other.
woodbrains":236ifa3y said:
Edit. Even folding a back over a flat, untensioned saw plate would impart stiffening tension, that merely fitting a slotted back would not, IMHO
I would categorically deny this. There is no mechanical difference between a slotted and bent spine. Yes, some makers use slotted spines and glue the blades in, but you can also squeeze the slot closed and hold the blade in place with friction only (in exactly the same manner as a folded spine). This is the way I make my saws. On several occasions I have removed my slotted spines from their blades, and I can tell you that doing so required much more force than I have ever needed to remove a folded spine.
I would also add that I don't think most folded spines are capable of, or intended to impart any tension to the saw blade. They serve only to stiffen the blade and prevent buckling. To impart tension, they would have to stretch the blade and hold it there. Given how easy it is to remove most of these folded spines, there is no way that enough friction exists between the blade and the spine to actually stretch the metal.
Just so it's clear where I'm coming from, I make backsaws using slotted spines, so feel free to filter what I have said above through that lens.
Isaac