Ives
Established Member
Does it mean the blade is dull or something? I can't really explain it, but the cut isn't the same all the way through, it's wonky and lopsided and a little squirrel I cut out looks all crooked.
StevieB":3vlt9jhf said:This effect is somewhat common in thicker timber and can be caused by a number of mechanisms which give the same effect. The two principle mechanisms are a non square table, or pushing the wood too fast through the cut. Think of it this way - when you cut, you move the timber in line with what you see the blade doing on the top of the piece ie in line with the pattern. You need the entire cut to be vertical, and need to allow time for the bottom of the blade to 'catch up' with the top of the cut (a scroll saw blade will flex from the middle remember, even if tensioned correctly).
To test your table for square, make a small half inch cut into a piece of timber of the required thickness. Then turn that timber round and push the back of the blade into the cut you have just made (ie timber behind the back of the blade). If your table is square the blade should align and go into the cut from the back - if it doesn't, your table is not square to the timber. A very small deviation will have a big effect.
To test whether you are pushing too fast, try cutting an inch or so diameter circle in a piece of timber. This should come out as a column, not a cone. It should also be able to fit into the piece of timber it was cut from via either the front or the back. If it doesn't, your cut is not vertical for whatever reason. If you know your table is square, then the cut may not be vertical because of a number of reasons:
Blade has a burr and this is throwing the cut off (unlikely as this tends to affect the whole cut and cutting to a line)
Blade is worn and not cutting efficiently
Pushing too hard and forcing the top of the cut to be faster than the bottom
Sawing too fast to allow dust to clear, slowing the bottom of the cut
Lubing the cut will lengthen blade life, possibly cool the blade, may help clear sawdust and may incerase cutting speed, but if your primary problem is a square table or too fast a cut rather than the above then lubing will not make much difference.
HTH!
Steve
Enter your email address to join: