Bojam
Established Member
Afternoon all,
I have a new 17in bandsaw. The spec says it can accommodate blades up to 32mm wide. It was supplied with a 30mm carbon steel blade which I have never used.
I bought a number of M42 (bimetal) blades of different widths and configurations from Ian at Tuffsaws and have been running these from day 1. The largest is a 20mm 3TPI blade that I use for resawing. I've been able to set this up (tension, tracking, guide bearings, etc.) to run straight and give nice even cuts. Obviously, since it's quite a coarse blade there is a bit of cleaning up to do, but I can resaw boards and achieve consistent thickness cuts without experiencing any drift or barrelling.
I also bought a carbide tipped blade specifically for clean cut resaw work. It's the 20mm wide X-Cut blade from a German company called Bandsaegenprofis. Made of Swedish steel band (0.6mm thickness) with a thin kerf (~1.5mm) and variable tooth pattern (12-14-16 pitch, 2-3TPI?). It's pretty similar to the Laguna Resaw King blade.
I fitted this blade for the first time yesterday and went through the usual process of tensioning and tracking then setting up the guide bearings. But no matter what I try I get a lead into the cut (i.e. the blade/cut line drifts away from the fence) and the blade continues to wander down the length of the board. So I get boards of inconsistent thickness (though not barrelled).
I'm struggling to understand what's going on here??
The 20mm M42 blade from Tuffsaws is ~0.8mm thick and I tension it to 7 on the tension scale (which runs from 0-10) and get good results. I've tried tensioning the carbide tipped blade at the same tension and at increments right up to close to the max. This doesn't seem to have any effect. I know these blades require considerable tension but the manufacturer advised me that a 20mm blade on my saw would be fine and I know of other people using similar saws with 3/4in carbide tipped blades and seem to be happy with the results. I've also tried tracking the blade further back and further forward but again, no noticable effect. I wondered about wheel alignment but since I can get good results with the M42 blades with the wheels in the factory set position I'm reluctant to mess about with this. I also can't put a straightedge up to check the alignment as the frame/casing sticks out beyond the wheel position.
I should add that I work with tropical hardwoods (much of it reclaimed) hence the choice of durable M42 for all my blades as standard. I was hoping the carbide tipped blade would allow me to resaw with cleaner results. Frustrated that I can't get it work (expecially since it cost about 100 Euros!)
Suggestions would be gratefully received as I've given up for now and refitted the M42 blade to get on with some work.
Thanks in advance (and apologies for the long post)!
I have a new 17in bandsaw. The spec says it can accommodate blades up to 32mm wide. It was supplied with a 30mm carbon steel blade which I have never used.
I bought a number of M42 (bimetal) blades of different widths and configurations from Ian at Tuffsaws and have been running these from day 1. The largest is a 20mm 3TPI blade that I use for resawing. I've been able to set this up (tension, tracking, guide bearings, etc.) to run straight and give nice even cuts. Obviously, since it's quite a coarse blade there is a bit of cleaning up to do, but I can resaw boards and achieve consistent thickness cuts without experiencing any drift or barrelling.
I also bought a carbide tipped blade specifically for clean cut resaw work. It's the 20mm wide X-Cut blade from a German company called Bandsaegenprofis. Made of Swedish steel band (0.6mm thickness) with a thin kerf (~1.5mm) and variable tooth pattern (12-14-16 pitch, 2-3TPI?). It's pretty similar to the Laguna Resaw King blade.
I fitted this blade for the first time yesterday and went through the usual process of tensioning and tracking then setting up the guide bearings. But no matter what I try I get a lead into the cut (i.e. the blade/cut line drifts away from the fence) and the blade continues to wander down the length of the board. So I get boards of inconsistent thickness (though not barrelled).
I'm struggling to understand what's going on here??
The 20mm M42 blade from Tuffsaws is ~0.8mm thick and I tension it to 7 on the tension scale (which runs from 0-10) and get good results. I've tried tensioning the carbide tipped blade at the same tension and at increments right up to close to the max. This doesn't seem to have any effect. I know these blades require considerable tension but the manufacturer advised me that a 20mm blade on my saw would be fine and I know of other people using similar saws with 3/4in carbide tipped blades and seem to be happy with the results. I've also tried tracking the blade further back and further forward but again, no noticable effect. I wondered about wheel alignment but since I can get good results with the M42 blades with the wheels in the factory set position I'm reluctant to mess about with this. I also can't put a straightedge up to check the alignment as the frame/casing sticks out beyond the wheel position.
I should add that I work with tropical hardwoods (much of it reclaimed) hence the choice of durable M42 for all my blades as standard. I was hoping the carbide tipped blade would allow me to resaw with cleaner results. Frustrated that I can't get it work (expecially since it cost about 100 Euros!)
Suggestions would be gratefully received as I've given up for now and refitted the M42 blade to get on with some work.
Thanks in advance (and apologies for the long post)!