Vertical, Bansaw, Horizontal Band Saw, chop Saw, Cold Saw?
I have a physically very small shop.
I have a small CNC Mill and a CNC converted 13x40 Chineese Lathe. Recently I've been doing some 316 Stainless stuff on the lathe and having problems parting off the parts. One of the recomendations was to part it in the band saw then clean up on the lathe. I currently don't have a good metal cutting saw. I used to have a chop saw, but it died and ugly smoking death hacking its way through a large copper bar. Not having a good metal cutting saw says I end up milling things in half or doing large cutoffs in the lathe. In the ideal world I'd have a good automatic horizontal band saw and a nice vertical band saw. In the ideal world I'd have a bigger shop. So the question is in a metal shop if you could only have one saw and space was at a preimum would you get a: Vertical band Saw? Horizontal Band Saw? Chop Saw? Cold Saw? I will be doing a fair bit of 316 Stainless in 3 to 6" diameters this year. See the last picture in the current post...http://unreasonablerocket.blogspot.com/ Paul |
Vertical, Bansaw, Horizontal Band Saw, chop Saw, Cold Saw?
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 11:31:26 -0800, wrote:
I have a physically very small shop. I have a small CNC Mill and a CNC converted 13x40 Chineese Lathe. Recently I've been doing some 316 Stainless stuff on the lathe and having problems parting off the parts. One of the recomendations was to part it in the band saw then clean up on the lathe. I currently don't have a good metal cutting saw. I used to have a chop saw, but it died and ugly smoking death hacking its way through a large copper bar. Yes..I can imagine that it did. Copper is NOT good for abrasive cutting. Neither is aluminum. Both can be gummed/melted apart..but its hard on the blade and hardware. Not having a good metal cutting saw says I end up milling things in half or doing large cutoffs in the lathe. In the ideal world I'd have a good automatic horizontal band saw and a nice vertical band saw. In the ideal world I'd have a bigger shop. So the question is in a metal shop if you could only have one saw and space was at a preimum would you get a: Vertical band Saw? Horizontal Band Saw? Chop Saw? Cold Saw? I will be doing a fair bit of 316 Stainless in 3 to 6" diameters this year. See the last picture in the current post...http://unreasonablerocket.blogspot.com/ Cold saw, followed by a decent horizontal. If money is an issue, a good horizontal saw first, with a selection of GOOD blades. I have 3 good vertical bandsaws..and nearly never use them. In your case, going up to 6", the only economical choice you have is a horizontal bandsaw. Chop saws big enough to cut 6" stock cost MONDO dinero. Gunner Paul |
Vertical, Bansaw, Horizontal Band Saw, chop Saw, Cold Saw?
On Feb 27, 2:25*pm, Gunner wrote:
On Wed, 27 Feb 2008 11:31:26 -0800, wrote: I have a physically very small shop. I have a small CNC Mill and a CNC converted 13x40 Chineese Lathe. Recently I've been doing some 316 Stainless stuff on the lathe and having problems parting off the parts. One of the recomendations was to part it in the band saw then clean up on the lathe. I currently don't have a good metal cutting saw. I used to have a chop saw, but it died and ugly smoking death hacking its way through a large copper bar. Yes..I can imagine that it did. *Copper is NOT good for abrasive cutting. *Neither is aluminum. Both can be gummed/melted apart..but its hard on the blade and hardware. Not having a good metal cutting saw says I end up milling things in half or doing large cutoffs in the lathe. In the ideal world I'd have a good automatic horizontal band saw and a nice vertical band saw. In the ideal world I'd have a bigger shop. So the question is in a metal shop if you could only have one saw and space was at a preimum would you get a: * *Vertical band Saw? * *Horizontal Band Saw? * *Chop Saw? * *Cold Saw? I will be doing a fair bit of 316 Stainless in 3 to 6" diameters this year. |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:47 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 DIYbanter