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Martin H. Eastburn
 
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I bet it would - almost all dual edges and just points top and bottom of pointed flats.
When square on, the 1/4" top and bottom are cut differently than the sides and offer
more resistance.

Good idea!

Martin

Kelley Mascher wrote:

I cut square tube with one corner up, diamond shape when viewed from
the end. I also cut angle with the opening facing one jaw of the vise.
It seems to speed up the cut considerably.

Cheers,

Kelley

On Fri, 28 Jan 2005 08:50:30 -0600, Rex B wrote:



Grant Erwin wrote:

Rex B wrote:


I agree, but 100 cuts will take a long time. You can add coolant flow
to speed things up. You would want a more coarse blade than what comes
with them. I think 6-8 TPI would be about right.
Might be worthwhile going to one size larger and get a better saw
if it will cut faster.


For 1/4" wall tubing the correct blade (3 teeth in the cut) has 12 tpi. I
might go down to 10 tpi. And buy a carbon steel blade, a good one, don't
spend the money on bimetal for 100 cuts on a one-off job. Bimetal blades
are just great but teeth strip off sometimes.

GWE


But since it's tubing, you actually are looking at 1/2" cuts, and even
more during a significant part of it as it cuts the top and bottom. I
think a coarser TPI would work fine and cut much faster.





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Martin Eastburn, Barbara Eastburn
@ home at Lion's Lair with our computer
NRA LOH, NRA Life
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