I'd also be opting for the bandsaw.
With a fine tooth blade, and even go so far as the wrap the rod in either tape, or even several layers of paper, just whatever prevents the breakout.
Tape, obviously you have the issue of its sticky residue, but paper, you lay the rod on a sheet of newspaper and roll it up in it. This should make it tight enough to the rod.
Used to use a trick for cutting bicycle brake and gear cable, which is twisted(braided?) thin strands.
If you have a proper set of cable cutters thats fine and cuts it cleanly. But if you try to cut this type of cable with pliers or regular snips, the end unravels and frays and you cannot feed it in to the cable hose/housing.
The solution there was to wrap the bit you're going to cut in several layers of electrical tape, and even cheap pliers will cut through cleanly because the cable inside is fully supported all round.
So the same is going to apply if you wrap the rod/dowel. The tight paper layers support it all round and no breakout occurs
With a fine tooth blade, and even go so far as the wrap the rod in either tape, or even several layers of paper, just whatever prevents the breakout.
Tape, obviously you have the issue of its sticky residue, but paper, you lay the rod on a sheet of newspaper and roll it up in it. This should make it tight enough to the rod.
Used to use a trick for cutting bicycle brake and gear cable, which is twisted(braided?) thin strands.
If you have a proper set of cable cutters thats fine and cuts it cleanly. But if you try to cut this type of cable with pliers or regular snips, the end unravels and frays and you cannot feed it in to the cable hose/housing.
The solution there was to wrap the bit you're going to cut in several layers of electrical tape, and even cheap pliers will cut through cleanly because the cable inside is fully supported all round.
So the same is going to apply if you wrap the rod/dowel. The tight paper layers support it all round and no breakout occurs