space.dandy
Established Member
Hi all,
I've just bought a new bandsaw, an Axminster HBS250N. I have never used a bandsaw before, so I have no experience by which to judge the setup or finished quality of the saw. Additionally, there are some things which look wrong to me, on which I'd like the opinion of experienced users.
The bandsaw came with a blade pre-installed, and I have followed the Axminster how-to on machine setup as closely as possible.
These are the things which look wrong to me when spinning the wheels during the setup:
Is any of that cause for concern? If so, is it a problem with the machine, blade or my setup? The movement of the blade means that there is a larger gap between the bearings and the blade than there should be, according to the guides.
I've attached a couple of photos showing a test cut. Any comments on the quality are most welcome. Also, I'd be grateful if someone could share example photos showing the quality that can be achieved with a well setup machine, for comparison.
I've just bought a new bandsaw, an Axminster HBS250N. I have never used a bandsaw before, so I have no experience by which to judge the setup or finished quality of the saw. Additionally, there are some things which look wrong to me, on which I'd like the opinion of experienced users.
The bandsaw came with a blade pre-installed, and I have followed the Axminster how-to on machine setup as closely as possible.
These are the things which look wrong to me when spinning the wheels during the setup:
- The blade oscillates front-to-back by about 1mm;
- The blade oscillates laterally by about 2mm; and
- The blade has a twist which throws it out of parallel with the fence (about 8mm over the length of a UJK Bandsaw Buddy).
Is any of that cause for concern? If so, is it a problem with the machine, blade or my setup? The movement of the blade means that there is a larger gap between the bearings and the blade than there should be, according to the guides.
I've attached a couple of photos showing a test cut. Any comments on the quality are most welcome. Also, I'd be grateful if someone could share example photos showing the quality that can be achieved with a well setup machine, for comparison.