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#1
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8"
thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks |
#2
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Cutting plexiglass
I worked in a sign shop for years where we routinely cut Plexiglas
sheets on a table saw with a carbide blade. Cuts great that way. blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks |
#3
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks I've used a table saw on plexi. It will be stinky, but it can be done. I'd recommend taping the line you're going to be cutting. I think it would be inconvenient to score and break on an 8 foot long axis, so I'd recommend the table saw. Otherwise, just put the scored plexi on a pipe or something that runs the entire length of the score (score side up), then press down on the plexi with a couple of 2x4s or something, so that the pressure is more of less equal on either side of the pipe. You might need a helper. I wouldn't recommend a Dremel (it will just melt it... trust me. :-) ), but a jig saw with a blade of medium aggression (i.e. not metal cutting, but not the super jagged either... maybe 10teeth per inch?) might work. Personally, I'd go with the table saw. It'll be much faster, and you're more likely to get a clean cut with a straight edge. I only say the table saw though because you're doing such long cuts. Usually it's just easier and faster to score and break it, IMO. -Nathan |
#4
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman wrote:
Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. 1.) Use a utility knife blade with the tip broken off or use the blade backwards, so the straight, non-beveled side of the blade is dragging on the plastic. Scoring plastic is more like scraping than cutting. 2.) Slightly angle the blade so that it plows slightly into the straight edge. I've cut miles of styrene and plexiglasses by hand with this method with excellent results. Try it! |
#5
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
The reply that said tape the plexiglass was good. I've taken 3"
masking tape, and scored a line straight down the middle of the tape. Worked everytime. blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks |
#6
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
Use a tablesaw with a blade for plywood and install it backward.A slow feed speed and you will never cut it any other way.Blade height just above the plexi and pressed against the table. "wpattison" wrote in message oups.com... The reply that said tape the plexiglass was good. I've taken 3" masking tape, and scored a line straight down the middle of the tape. Worked everytime. blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks |
#7
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
http://www.reefkeeping.com/issues/2002-04/jg/index.php
-- Have a Great Week ! Check Winter Haven's Current Weather http://www.wunderground.com/cgi-bin/...er+Haven+33881 "blueman" wrote in message ... I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks |
#8
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Cutting plexiglass
This will work also. Set the saw to a little less than half the thickness
of the plastic and slice a kerf on each side. Now snap it. You will have a little edge in the center that is easy to file, sand or scrape. This should give you a nice sharp edge. While cutting use a steady feed rate. Slowing down and stopping will scorch the edge. Usually blades used for plastic have no set to the teeth on the blade. -- Roger Shoaf About the time I had mastered getting the toothpaste back in the tube, then they come up with this striped stuff. "Ray Mandeville" wrote in message ... I worked in a sign shop for years where we routinely cut Plexiglas sheets on a table saw with a carbide blade. Cuts great that way. blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks |
#9
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks Should have bought the plexi at a local glass company and had them cut into whatever sizes you needed.... Ive done that before just for my own convienience... just have to call them with the dimensions and pick up... ~: |
#10
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? You have been given good advice on cutting plexi. Score and snap is the way to go. a freind has a shop where he fabricates plexi. there is a special blade designed for the purpose but it isn't common. YOu have to go to a plexi supplier to find it. It has a hook on the end so that the cutting edge faces toward you and he always scores by draggin the blade toward himself. then he snaps it over the edge of the table. He makes one heavy score and then snaps. he then uses a buffing wheel to smooth the edge. |
#11
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
I'm surprised I didn't see this answer, I've used my bandsaw also for
cutting plexi. Yesterday I even used my 80-tooth Diablo blade for cutting 1/8" plexi. Main thing is to keep slow steady speed on feed. If you jam it in there too fast, it'll shatter or chipout the plexi. No one asked, what project you using 7x48 plexi for? Good luck! Duff |
#12
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Cutting plexiglass
A friend uses a table saw with a special blade.
Lawrence wrote: blueman wrote: I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? You have been given good advice on cutting plexi. Score and snap is the way to go. a freind has a shop where he fabricates plexi. there is a special blade designed for the purpose but it isn't common. YOu have to go to a plexi supplier to find it. It has a hook on the end so that the cutting edge faces toward you and he always scores by draggin the blade toward himself. then he snaps it over the edge of the table. He makes one heavy score and then snaps. he then uses a buffing wheel to smooth the edge. |
#13
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Cutting plexiglass
On 25 Aug 2006 15:36:21 -0700, "Lawrence"
wrote: You have been given good advice on cutting plexi. Score and snap is the way to go. a freind has a shop where he fabricates plexi. there is a special blade designed for the purpose but it isn't common. YOu have to go to a plexi supplier to find it. It has a hook on the end so that the cutting edge faces toward you and he always scores by draggin the blade toward himself. then he snaps it over the edge of the table. He makes one heavy score and then snaps. he then uses a buffing wheel to smooth the edge. The scouring tool you described can be found in the HD ceramic tile section. It has a carbide tip. Another improvisation is to use the carbide edge tip of a router bit to scour the plexiglas line. |
#14
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Cutting plexiglass
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#15
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Cutting plexiglass
On Sat, 26 Aug 2006 16:29:58 -0400, Stubby
wrote: Our router tends to cause the Plexiglass to chip and leaves an ugly job. The idea is to use the bit as a sharp point tool for drawing (scouring) the line on the plexiglass by hand. Use that straight edge steel ruler as a guide. I did not intend that you run the bit with the router to make the cut. Doing that does indeed make a mess. The scouring tool you described can be found in the HD ceramic tile section. It has a carbide tip. Another improvisation is to use the carbide edge tip of a router bit to scour the plexiglas line. |
#16
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Cutting plexiglass
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#17
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman wrote:
Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? I would suggest a plywood blade (REVERSED) so that the teeth do not chip and drag.. Also use the tape on the cut line.. Worked for me for both plastics and lams.. S&B Enterprises Buffalo 'the Herd of One!' |
#18
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Cutting plexiglass
"blueman" wrote in message
... I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks I build acrylic display cases as a side business/hobby. I use a large table saw with a very expensive ($200+) narrow kerf triple chip alternate tooth profile blade made from C4 carbide (80 tooth). The blade should protrude 1/4" through the material. Next it gets run through a joiner for a beautiful edge that will take polishing nicely. For scoring, I use a $1,800 Fletcher multi material cutter... Okay, okay, you need the cheap solution! For scoring I recommend a drywall T square. The large T section helps keep it square and in position. I put some "Foamies" self adhesive foam on the back of the T to keep it stationary. You MUST be sure the successive passes you make are in the same groove or the break will run out of the groove. With a single motion to break the material, I can break out up to 1/4 inch thick sheets that look very clean. However, I find it is hard to breakout pieces near a parallel edge without runout and the accuracy may be off 1/64 or more end to end which is not ideal for cementing boxes together. I use a fletcher scoring tool to make the cut. It has a comfortable grip and changable blades. I only have to make 3 passes with this method on 1/8 material. Check here for the heavy duty handheld plastic cutter http://www.fletcher-terry.com/framing/ Good luck John |
#19
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Cutting plexiglass
"JohnR66" wrote in message
... "blueman" wrote in message ... I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks I build acrylic display cases as a side business/hobby. I use a large table saw with a very expensive ($200+) narrow kerf triple chip alternate tooth profile blade made from C4 carbide (80 tooth). The blade should protrude 1/4" through the material. Next it gets run through a joiner for a beautiful edge that will take polishing nicely. For scoring, I use a $1,800 Fletcher multi material cutter... Okay, okay, you need the cheap solution! For scoring I recommend a drywall T square. The large T section helps keep it square and in position. I put some "Foamies" self adhesive foam on the back of the T to keep it stationary. You MUST be sure the successive passes you make are in the same groove or the break will run out of the groove. With a single motion to break the material, I can break out up to 1/4 inch thick sheets that look very clean. However, I find it is hard to breakout pieces near a parallel edge without runout and the accuracy may be off 1/64 or more end to end which is not ideal for cementing boxes together. I use a fletcher scoring tool to make the cut. It has a comfortable grip and changable blades. I only have to make 3 passes with this method on 1/8 material. Check here for the heavy duty handheld plastic cutter http://www.fletcher-terry.com/framing/ Good luck John Oh, and one last thing. It may cost more than the plastic, but if this is a one shot deal, it may be better to have someone cut it for you. John |
#20
Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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Cutting plexiglass
To read this thread, you'd think this was brain surgery or something. Put a
plywood blade on the tablesaw and cut it. "JohnR66" wrote in message ... "JohnR66" wrote in message ... "blueman" wrote in message ... I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks I build acrylic display cases as a side business/hobby. I use a large table saw with a very expensive ($200+) narrow kerf triple chip alternate tooth profile blade made from C4 carbide (80 tooth). The blade should protrude 1/4" through the material. Next it gets run through a joiner for a beautiful edge that will take polishing nicely. For scoring, I use a $1,800 Fletcher multi material cutter... Okay, okay, you need the cheap solution! For scoring I recommend a drywall T square. The large T section helps keep it square and in position. I put some "Foamies" self adhesive foam on the back of the T to keep it stationary. You MUST be sure the successive passes you make are in the same groove or the break will run out of the groove. With a single motion to break the material, I can break out up to 1/4 inch thick sheets that look very clean. However, I find it is hard to breakout pieces near a parallel edge without runout and the accuracy may be off 1/64 or more end to end which is not ideal for cementing boxes together. I use a fletcher scoring tool to make the cut. It has a comfortable grip and changable blades. I only have to make 3 passes with this method on 1/8 material. Check here for the heavy duty handheld plastic cutter http://www.fletcher-terry.com/framing/ Good luck John Oh, and one last thing. It may cost more than the plastic, but if this is a one shot deal, it may be better to have someone cut it for you. John |
#21
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Cutting plexiglass
To read this thread, you'd think this was brain surgery or something. Put
a plywood blade on the tablesaw and cut it. How the heck do you sharpen plywood? - Owen - |
#22
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Cutting plexiglass
WTF are you talking about?
"Owen Lawrence" wrote in message ... How the heck do you sharpen plywood? - Owen - |
#23
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Cutting plexiglass
He's asking how you sharpen a blade that is made from plywood.
"CW" wrote in message ink.net... WTF are you talking about? "Owen Lawrence" wrote in message ... How the heck do you sharpen plywood? - Owen - |
#24
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Cutting plexiglass
Owen Lawrence (in ) said:
|| To read this thread, you'd think this was brain surgery or || something. Put a || plywood blade on the tablesaw and cut it. | | How the heck do you sharpen plywood? With a plywood file? -- Morris Dovey DeSoto Solar DeSoto, Iowa USA http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto |
#25
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Cutting plexiglass
"Owen Lawrence" wrote in message ... To read this thread, you'd think this was brain surgery or something. Put a plywood blade on the tablesaw and cut it. How the heck do you sharpen plywood? Sharpening plywood is no problem, it a bitch however to set the teeth. |
#26
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Cutting plexiglass
A Roto-Zip works pretty good.
Nova wrote: Ray Mandeville wrote: I worked in a sign shop for years where we routinely cut Plexiglas sheets on a table saw with a carbide blade. Cuts great that way. blueman wrote: I agree with Ray, but for 1/8" plexy make sure you use a zero clearance tablesaw insert. |
#27
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Cutting plexiglass
Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? If you're not in a hurry, you should be able to cut it with any saw that's got teeth close enough together to have more than one tooth on the thickness of the material. Tipping the saw closer to horizontal like a back-saw will help if your saw is marginal. Failing that, sandwiching the plastic between boards when you snap it should help keep the break from wandering off the score-line. |
#28
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Cutting plexiglass
Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up
breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Yes, and if having a problem, score BOTH sides then break it over a long straight edge like a 2X4 on edge |
#29
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman writes:
I bought a sheet of 48x24" plexiglass at home depot (maybe about 1/8" thick). I am trying to cut in 7" slices (each 48" long). Per the instructions from the Home Depot guy, I bought a blade that is supposed to score the Plexiglass and then you snap it. Well, I am having 2 problems. First, I am finding it hard to score precisely on a straight line (even though I am following a steel straight edge). The blade keeps wanting to slip away slightly. Second, after scoring with several passes, when I snap it, it ends up breaking only partially along the line (and the rest breaks away at a short angle). One solution, would be to just be more careful on scoring the line and then scoring even deeper with more multiple passes. Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks Thanks for all the MANY helpful responses. At the suggestion of one user, I ended up taking the easy way out. Instead of going back to Home Depot, I went to Lowes where they not only sell but also cut plexiglass. They had a nice panel-cutter type machine but even so the guy ended up breaking a sheet before taking the time to score it enough to make clean cuts. The good thing is that this time the breakage was on him. And also, he didn't even charge me for the 4 cuts required!!! |
#30
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Cutting plexiglass
OK, we've had lots of good conversation about cutting Plexiglas.
How about some advice on drilling and countersinking? Larry |
#31
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman wrote:
Are there any EASIER and MORE accurate ways to cut plexiglass? Can I use a regular table saw blade (or will it shatter it)? What about a jigsaw or a dremel? Thanks http://www.trendmachinery.co.uk/libr...s/PAGE_015.PDF -- Sir Benjamin Middlethwaite |
#32
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Cutting plexiglass
blueman wrote: Thanks for all the MANY helpful responses. At the suggestion of one user, I ended up taking the easy way out. Instead of going back to Home Depot, I went to Lowes where they not only sell but also cut plexiglass. They had a nice panel-cutter type machine but even so the guy ended up breaking a sheet before taking the time to score it enough to make clean cuts. The good thing is that this time the breakage was on him. And also, he didn't even charge me for the 4 cuts required!!! Good solution. I'd be reluctant to score such long skinny pieces myself. So I use a circular saw, with a 140-150 tooth blade (7-1/4") designed for cutting plastic. Mark |
#33
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Cutting plexiglass
i have a question . i wanna cut plexy glass letters for making sign just
like channel letters but i dont know which cutting machine i can use for it . coz almost all cutting machines does not cut sharp letters does anyone here who can guide me. |
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