Giff
Established Member
Has anyone any experience with or opinions on using a wobble saw on a spindle for grooving ? Thanks Geoff
Actually probably a better alternative to the slotting disc. The wobble saw is mostly spinning free in the slot with very little risk of kickback or other hazard. It doesn't actually wobble in any sense - it's always balanced. They hum a bit (quietly) as they do displace a lot of air - but no vibration or actual wobble.Giff":2aat26k9 said:Thanks for the advice...I have always thought they may be a poor alternative to a dedicated slotting disc but the replies are really useful.Thanks M for the Ebay link as well. Geoff
You may well be right about cross grain - I've never tried using mine that way,* not least because of the difficulty of setting it up. But not a prob along the grain.PAC1":1npyqbit said:Geoff, a wobble saw is better than the disc but not as good a the micro or shim adjustable groover that have dedicated nicking cutters. My experience is the wobble saw is a good industrial groover which is good at cutting grooves along the grain. I do not agree that there is no breakout with a wobble saw, my experience is there is breakout. Given the direction of travel of the blade it has to be a risk at the very least. For high class work I use the shim adjustable groover with dedicated nickers to prevent any breakout.
Mines got a setting scale on it marked in 1/8"s which seems to be spot on.[/quote]heimlaga":sl9c8alj said:I do also use my two wobble saws quite a bit. One of them actually has a pair of scribe cutters.
The downside with wobble saws is that they are dudfficult so set for exactly the width you want. Usually you end up test cutting 3 or 4 times before the width is spot on.
It's tilted sideways to make a wider cut so it stays in balance, there is no wobbling or vibration. In any case it's only a slight tilt - typical max cut is 3/4" wide slot so the blade is only a few degrees off square.Giff":3ba3y4z6 said:Sorry if this is a stupid question but I have never used one...... Does the blade actually "wobble" up and down to cut the groove. Are there any balance issues with vibration ? I was also unsure about accuracy so I will check if there are calibration marks on the one I am looking at as Jacob's.
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