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Cutting metal on a Sears Radial Arm Saw
I own a Sears 10" radial arm saw that I purchased when my son was in
the Cub Scouts. He's now 40 just to give you an age fix on the saw (which actually still looks like it's new). Recently I purchased an 8" abrasive metal cutting blade from Home Depot and used it to cut some thin-wall aluminum tubing to length and it did a fine job (except for the fact that the hot fiber blade made my shop smell like a wet dog for about 12-hours). I also chopped some steel angle stock and, except for all the sparks, that appeared to work fine too. Is there a problem with cutting metal on a radial arm saw normally intended for woodworking? Why I ask is that I have some 1-1/2" hard aluminum (7075?) bar stock that I need to cut down to machine on my lathe. Am I in for some unexpected problems if I try to cut it on this saw using a 10" abrasive blade? Thanks in advance. Harry C. |
DON'T use the abrasive blade for aluminum, use a fine tooth carbide
blade. Try and find one with negative hook (blade is tilted back from the direction of travel) or at least one with a minimum of forward hook. Wear safety glasses, it throws hot metal chips everwhere! Not the best for everyday work but a lot of folks cut aluminum this way. Cutting steel with an abrasive blade has a few more issues: The sparks are all shot in a line, they can get hot enough to start a small fire in the back of your machine. The old Sears units were not very well shielded from the fine abrasive grit, they tend to die a quick death from toasted bearings. If yours is 30 years old, the grease and seals are not too good already. And yes, the stink is bad. For steel, I'd suggest getting a cheap 14" cutoff saw and use it outside on the driveway. They look like this: http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=47003 http://www.harborfreight.com/cpi/cta...emnumber=91938 If you are patient, you can usually find them on sale for well under $100, I've seen HF advertise them for $49 wrote: I own a Sears 10" radial arm saw that I purchased when my son was in the Cub Scouts. He's now 40 just to give you an age fix on the saw (which actually still looks like it's new). Recently I purchased an 8" abrasive metal cutting blade from Home Depot and used it to cut some thin-wall aluminum tubing to length and it did a fine job (except for the fact that the hot fiber blade made my shop smell like a wet dog for about 12-hours). I also chopped some steel angle stock and, except for all the sparks, that appeared to work fine too. Is there a problem with cutting metal on a radial arm saw normally intended for woodworking? Why I ask is that I have some 1-1/2" hard aluminum (7075?) bar stock that I need to cut down to machine on my lathe. Am I in for some unexpected problems if I try to cut it on this saw using a 10" abrasive blade? Thanks in advance. Harry C. |
Is there a problem with cutting metal on a radial arm saw normally
intended for woodworking? I've sliced up 4 inch thick slabs of solid 6061 aluminum with a 10 inch 80- tooth carbide woodworking blade on a 12-inch radial saw. It works, but my advice is to absolutely clamp the work securely on each side. Don't try to hand-hold the work, even something light. I keep a small museum of "oops" souvenirs on the shop shelf. One of them is a small end of 4x4x1/4 square aluminum tubing that I didn't clamp on the radial saw. It caught on a tooth at the end of the cut, and flew several hundred feet (the saw is on wheels and I cut outdoors). Don't wanna think about getting hit with that kind of large sharp-edged shrapnel. A Sears (Emerson) radial arm saw has a lot of wiggle and slop in the table, carriage, bearings, etc. This, plus the high speed blade, makes for a rather risky metal-cutting experience. But I do it. |
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