Alpha-Dave
Established Member
Thank you for looking.
I have bought a flat-top blade for my table saw so that I can make box joints, but the riving knife is designed to support an overhead guard an therefore extends above the blade, and I need to make a shorter one. I picked up some 2mm mild steel plate from my local merchant and have cut it to the size and shape I need with an angle grinder and files.
Now when I compare the original and the new one, I can feel that the mild steel one has a lot more flexibility (they are both 2 mm), if I put my thumbs together in the middle as a fulcrum and pull the edges the mild steel moves a mm or 2 while the original barely shifts.
I therefore assume that the original was made from harder steel.
So 2x questions:
1) will using the mild steel make a difference? (I suspect the answer is ‘maybe’: it won’t make a difference in normal use, but if there was a catch then who knows)
2) what other grade of metal would be more suitable? Does it need to be hardened? I suspect that it should not be so hard as to be brittle.
Thanks in advance!
I have bought a flat-top blade for my table saw so that I can make box joints, but the riving knife is designed to support an overhead guard an therefore extends above the blade, and I need to make a shorter one. I picked up some 2mm mild steel plate from my local merchant and have cut it to the size and shape I need with an angle grinder and files.
Now when I compare the original and the new one, I can feel that the mild steel one has a lot more flexibility (they are both 2 mm), if I put my thumbs together in the middle as a fulcrum and pull the edges the mild steel moves a mm or 2 while the original barely shifts.
I therefore assume that the original was made from harder steel.
So 2x questions:
1) will using the mild steel make a difference? (I suspect the answer is ‘maybe’: it won’t make a difference in normal use, but if there was a catch then who knows)
2) what other grade of metal would be more suitable? Does it need to be hardened? I suspect that it should not be so hard as to be brittle.
Thanks in advance!