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On Nov 17, 11:50*am, wrote:
For some reason, when I use a recipricating saw to cut something, I always had trouble at the end of the cutting. Say a PVC pipe that is already in the ground and I made a trench to expose it. *The pipe is 2" in diameter, I exposed enough of the soil to make sure the blade when fully extended would not cut into some stones or pebbles or roots. *I start the cut, no problem, it's ripping through real nice and smooth, but when I am 75% of my way through, the pipe and saw started shaking and vibrating violently to make the cut exceedingly difficult. Now this is probably because the enough of the pipe has been cut so it no longer is "biting" onto the blade hard enough so the blade wanders? Is it because I am not holding it tightly enough? Or is this related to the quality of the saw? Ot should I always cut something from both directions - instead of starting a cut and carry it all the way through, cut it half way then start the cut from the opposing side and meet in the middle? Thanks, Hose clamp a piece of wood to the pipe to keep it stiff, cut through into the wood. Light even pressure enough to keep the chips flowing with the shoe tight to the pipe. |
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