sickasapike
Established Member
Hi all, not expecting much more than 'thats what you get with pallet wood', but thought I might pick up a tip or two and see what people think of a possible solution.
I'm resawing 10mmish pallet planks into 3 x 3...4...2..3..2.. mm thick slices with a bandsaw (300 quidish Record Power model), the saw is almost new, I went to pains to get it nicely set up and have rechecked it today; so not looking for advice on that as such, but while stays straight enought for my purposes with most planks, sometimes it wanders a lot more to one side (or the other, no pattern so not just down to the natural drift which I've just learned about), almost to the edge and I stop the saw and rescue it one way or another, presumably this is fair enough given the quality of the timber and what I'm trying to do ?
I'm not after dead straight cuts, it's for a rustic (err, cheap !) bit of panelling that I'll sand smoothish at the joins when it's in-situ so don't mind the wander as long as it doesn't get too silly.
I was thinking, if I make some kind of 'point fence', like the corner of a piece of timber of the right height clamped down level with the leading edge of the blade so I could vary the angle of attack and so rescue the wavering a little better when it happens.
Assuming I work it so as not to chop my fingers off, is this a good idea or will it not obey and just stress the blade more ? - any harm in trying ?
I'm resawing 10mmish pallet planks into 3 x 3...4...2..3..2.. mm thick slices with a bandsaw (300 quidish Record Power model), the saw is almost new, I went to pains to get it nicely set up and have rechecked it today; so not looking for advice on that as such, but while stays straight enought for my purposes with most planks, sometimes it wanders a lot more to one side (or the other, no pattern so not just down to the natural drift which I've just learned about), almost to the edge and I stop the saw and rescue it one way or another, presumably this is fair enough given the quality of the timber and what I'm trying to do ?
I'm not after dead straight cuts, it's for a rustic (err, cheap !) bit of panelling that I'll sand smoothish at the joins when it's in-situ so don't mind the wander as long as it doesn't get too silly.
I was thinking, if I make some kind of 'point fence', like the corner of a piece of timber of the right height clamped down level with the leading edge of the blade so I could vary the angle of attack and so rescue the wavering a little better when it happens.
Assuming I work it so as not to chop my fingers off, is this a good idea or will it not obey and just stress the blade more ? - any harm in trying ?