cowtown_eric
Established Member
Well, I zoomed in on the image and it appears to me that he blade is installed backwards....A coping saw works best on the pull stroke, and not on the push-stroke!
Kind of depends on what you’re doing. For some people standing and coping a molding on a sawhorse can be easier pushing because you can see the profile you’re following without having to crouch or sit. Ultimately it is user preference.Well, I zoomed in on the image and it appears to me that he blade is installed backwards....A coping saw works best on the pull stroke, and not on the push-stroke!
Kind of depends on what you’re doing. For some people standing and coping a molding on a sawhorse can be easier pushing because you can see the profile you’re following without having to crouch or sit. Ultimately it is user preference.
Pete
Hi Trafalgar, I am, on this occasion only roughing out, just getting rid of the bulk before chiselling or gouging. Using a staright cut, back saw, would have left quite a chunk to dig out of a tigh corner. I thought why not the coping saw?If you need to put very sharp curves in thick, hard material I'm afraid you're going to have to move up to power tools or make release cuts with a tenon saw and chisel to the lines. You can only ask so much of a coping saw, even the fancy-schmancy ones. The blades will only take so much tension.
Hi AES, The bent frame? Yes I have opened its legs a couple of times, but the problem generally returns quite quickly. Perhaps I expect too much from the coping saw. To me, at the moment, it is a saw which can cut along curved lines. A small portable scroll saw if you like.Thanks Geoff. It WAS a sticky, but perhaps someone changed/moved it. I haven't looked for it for a while now (I see it's already 3 years old "tempus fugit" and all that).
Anyway, hope it helps. I thought the Swiss tend to approach things in a complicated manner, but IMHO, some of the suggestions above are WAY OTT. For me,it's pretty simple - if the saw frame is a bit bent, just bend it back the other way a bit - and perhaps add a new blade; if it's too slack, buy/make another saw frame, they're cheap/easy enough surely?
For me, the idea of adding a big "brace" - which looks heavy when compared to the saw frame - to something which is normally used to "light/fine" cuts must be counter-productive. But "each to his own". If I haven't tried it myself - I haven't - I cannot say "it's wrong/doesn't work for me".
Hi cowtown_eric, That is a good point, in my case using the saw, cutting on the pull stroke, led to some speltching which damaged the line I was trying to follow. The speltching will be cut out in the carving stage, I hope, but easier, for now if I can see the line.Well, I zoomed in on the image and it appears to me that he blade is installed backwards....A coping saw works best on the pull stroke, and not on the push-stroke!
Hi AES, The bent frame? Yes I have opened its legs a couple of times, but the problem generally returns quite quickly. Perhaps I expect too much from the coping saw. To me, at the moment, it is a saw which can cut along curved lines. A small portable scroll saw if you like.
A new frame is a possibility, more likely if the job rate, for the saw, rises above about two, or three, jobs a year.
Thank you for your input, and the work involved compiling the post on all things Scroll, Coping, and Piercing saw blades.
geoff
try a finer blade!....that one looked in the "coarse" rangeHi cowtown_eric, That is a good point, in my case using the saw, cutting on the pull stroke, led to some speltching which damaged the line I was trying to follow. The speltching will be cut out in the carving stage, I hope, but easier, for now if I can see the line.
geoff
Job done, at the moment, cw. This time I was cutting 35mm hardwood. Next time who knows. Still I'll keep my eyes open for fine blades.try a finer blade!....that one looked in the "coarse" range
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