I use a Stanley blade and cut the first line. It helps a bit.I've bought some nice Birch ply to make boxes but am struggling to get a clean cut with my circular saw. I know I can hide the top surface inside the boxes but I would like to get as good a cut as possible to start with so that its not a problem in the first place. I have a Saxton 80T blade which will 'rip' satisfactorily but 'cross cut' not so good. I resorted to Youtube and tried different cut depths including a two stage cut. Is table saw the only way?
You have given me a bit of an idea for a 3D printed holder that slides on the rail holding two stanly blades to score both sides of the cut. Could be a useful tool for very fragile cuts.I use a Stanley blade and cut the first line. It helps a bit.
I have found by adjusting the height of the blade that it only justprotudes of is level with the surface of the ply produves a clean cut.I've bought some nice Birch ply to make boxes but am struggling to get a clean cut with my circular saw. I know I can hide the top surface inside the boxes but I would like to get as good a cut as possible to start with so that its not a problem in the first place. I have a Saxton 80T blade which will 'rip' satisfactorily but 'cross cut' not so good. I resorted to Youtube and tried different cut depths including a two stage cut. Is table saw the only way?
That looks good but I think it makes the saw so long it could cause difficulties, only useful for long cuts.If you've got a few pounds to spend this is probably the ultimate answer to the problem Festool Plunge-cut saw with scoring function TSV 60 KEBQ-Plus 230V online
That is a very good idea. It could mount on the front of the saw itself and be engaged with a tilt downwards and locked in position. Cheaper than the festool scoring thingy.You have given me a bit of an idea for a 3D printed holder that slides on the rail holding two stanly blades to score both sides of the cut. Could be a useful tool for very fragile cuts.
I might give it a go.
which model did you go for?OK I'm back. I took the plunge and bought a budget track saw that seemed to be fairly well recommended for the sort of use that I need. Just been trying it out on some scrap and the cut is perfect! Many thanks for everyone that chipped in on this - problem now solved.
Cheers
Steve.
Screwfix/Erbauer with an extra Makita track.which model did you go for?
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