Hello
@seanf
Nice Christmas present you got
Bandsaw
Bandsaw which can be used for cutting both metal (e.g. mild still) and wood is going to be unnecessarily expensive because speed required for metal is very different from speed for wood.
Even if your hardest metal is aluminium - I would still consider a separate tool than a woodworking bandsaw because you do not want to mix metal shavings with wood. All sort of interesting things may occur.
As others said:
- blade change is not something you will be looking forward to, and you really need different blades for metal and wood. You often need different blades even for different tasks related to cutting wood
- Bandsaw is a great tool, so if you can get it, then definitely buy the best/biggest you can afford. Size wise - consider if you need to cut really wide stock (e.g. guitar making) or tall stock (e.g. milling your own lumber/re-sawing, cutting veneer). Knowing which dimension is more important to you will help ruling out certain models and reduce cost.
If you only ever work with small stock (e.g. model making) perhaps consider a scrollsaw (for wood) instead of bandsaw.
Cutting small pieces
If you are concerned about safety when cutting small pieces on a mitre saw - take a look at the examples I listed below. They should give you some ideas how you to solve your particular task(s).
Each video is short but shows different approach so I recommend watching them all:
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