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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

Im trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered jig
saw and its chipping the plastic like mad.
A friend told me there is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise
me?
Im a rank amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I
dont want to buy any further power tools as Id not have any real use
for them.
Peter


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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On Wednesday, 23 October 2019 16:35:03 UTC+1, pete wrote:
Im trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered jig
saw and its chipping the plastic like mad.
A friend told me there is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise
me?
Im a rank amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name.. I
dont want to buy any further power tools as Id not have any real use
for them.
Peter


I would say the finer the teeth the better and use something to cover the Melamine stuff like a strong tape or even a metal ruler to protect and help stop any Melamine rising and hence breaking off.
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On 23/10/2019 16:34, pete wrote:
Im trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered jig
saw and its chipping the plastic like mad.
A friend told me there is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise
me?
Im a rank amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I
dont want to buy any further power tools as Id not have any real use
for them.
Peter



Blade has too few teeth - find a laminate blade with finer teeth.
Turning off the orbital action on the jig saw may help.
Tape up the cutting line with masking tape before cutting.

--
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

In article al.NET,
pete wrote:
I‘m trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered
jig saw and it‘s chipping the plastic like mad. A friend told me there
is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise me? I‘m a rank
amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I don‘t want to
buy any further power tools as I‘d not have any real use for them.


Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.

--
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Dave Plowman London SW
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On 23/10/2019 19:35, Jimk wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" Wrote in message:
In article al.NET,
pete wrote:
I€˜m trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered
jig saw and it€˜s chipping the plastic like mad. A friend told me there
is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise me? I€˜m a rank
amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I don€˜t want to
buy any further power tools as I€˜d not have any real use for them.


Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.


If cut upside down...

He said he doesn't want to buy any more gear...


He could go mad and cut it with a hand-saw.

SteveW


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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On 23/10/2019 18:10, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:

Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.



You can get blades that cut on the down-stroke (reversed teeth)

https://www.screwfix.com/p/bosch-t10...m-5-pack/15283

(possibly not the jigsaw blade fitting the OP requires)

It's these type of blades that will require any orbital/pendulum action
to be disabled on the saw.

However the OP may/will have the plastic coating on both top and bottom
surfaces so such a blade may produce one surface without chips and the
other with more chipping.

What may also help on the lower surface is to clamp a thin sacrificial
piece of wood to the board and to cut through both at the same time. The
sacrificial wood will support the plastic laminate and prevent chipping.
I would still also use tape along the cut line.


--
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On Wednesday, 23 October 2019 20:28:28 UTC+1, alan_m wrote:
On 23/10/2019 18:10, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:


Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.



You can get blades that cut on the down-stroke (reversed teeth)

https://www.screwfix.com/p/bosch-t10...m-5-pack/15283

(possibly not the jigsaw blade fitting the OP requires)

It's these type of blades that will require any orbital/pendulum action
to be disabled on the saw.

However the OP may/will have the plastic coating on both top and bottom
surfaces so such a blade may produce one surface without chips and the
other with more chipping.

What may also help on the lower surface is to clamp a thin sacrificial
piece of wood to the board and to cut through both at the same time. The
sacrificial wood will support the plastic laminate and prevent chipping.


That's the gold standard. Another good plan which you can't do is to set your circular saw blade shallow. All other approaches help but not so much as clamping wood on.

Jigsaws are seldom a good tool for the job. Circulars are way more useful.


NT

I would still also use tape along the cut line.

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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

pete Wrote in message:
I?m trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered jig
saw and it?s chipping the plastic like mad.
A friend told me there is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise
me?
I?m a rank amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I
don?t want to buy any further power tools as I?d not have any real use
for them.
Peter


https://www.amazon.co.uk/Faithfull-J...lades-Laminate
/dp/B000Y8JG62/ref=mp_s_a_1_2?keywords=worktop+blade&qid=15718474 7
0&sr=8-2


Many others are available....

--
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

"Dave Plowman (News)" Wrote in message:
In article al.NET,
pete wrote:
I‘m trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered
jig saw and it‘s chipping the plastic like mad. A friend told me there
is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise me? I‘m a rank
amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I don‘t want to
buy any further power tools as I‘d not have any real use for them.


Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.


If cut upside down...

He said he doesn't want to buy any more gear...
--
Jimk


----Android NewsGroup Reader----
http://usenet.sinaapp.com/


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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF



"Steve Walker" wrote in message
...
On 23/10/2019 19:35, Jimk wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" Wrote in message:
In article al.NET,
pete wrote:
I€˜m trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered
jig saw and it€˜s chipping the plastic like mad. A friend told me there
is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise me? I€˜m a rank
amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I don€˜t want to
buy any further power tools as I€˜d not have any real use for them.

Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.


If cut upside down...

He said he doesn't want to buy any more gear...


He could go mad and cut it with a hand-saw.


But he hasnt got one.

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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On 23/10/2019 18:10, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:

Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.


Blades that often come with even decent circular saws are often more
suited to fast ripping rather than cutting laminate. An additional
purchase of a 60 or 80 tooth blade may be necessary.


--
mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk
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Default Lonely Psychotic Senile Ozzie Troll Alert! LOL

On Thu, 24 Oct 2019 08:50:40 +1100, cantankerous trolling geezer Rodent
Speed, the auto-contradicting senile sociopath, blabbered, again:


But he hasn¢t got one.


What does it take to make you shut your stupid, endlessly driveling gob, you
senile bigmouthed trolling COWARD?

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little ignorant ****."
MID:
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

Steve Walker Wrote in message:
On 23/10/2019 19:35, Jimk wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" Wrote in message:
In article al.NET,
pete wrote:
I?m trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered
jig saw and it?s chipping the plastic like mad. A friend told me there
is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise me? I?m a rank
amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I don?t want to
buy any further power tools as I?d not have any real use for them.

Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.


If cut upside down...

He said he doesn't want to buy any more gear...


He could go mad and cut it with a hand-saw.

SteveW




OOI where's my post that you replied to gone? I see it on Google
gropes but not in this thread on Plusnet (giganews I
believe)?
--
Jimk


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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On 23/10/2019 16:34, pete wrote:
Im trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered jig
saw and its chipping the plastic like mad.
A friend told me there is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise
me?
Im a rank amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I
dont want to buy any further power tools as Id not have any real use
for them.
Peter



Score it with a knife first.

If only one side matter put that on the bottom as most jigsaw blades cut
on the up stroke. You can get down cut blades if its difficult to cut
from the other side.



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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

In article ,
alan_m wrote:
On 23/10/2019 18:10, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:


Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.


Blades that often come with even decent circular saws are often more
suited to fast ripping rather than cutting laminate. An additional
purchase of a 60 or 80 tooth blade may be necessary.


I'd have thought 'decent' would cover both saw and blade. ;-) Although
many these days come with tipped blades that are a reasonable compromise.

--
*If a pig loses its voice, is it disgruntled?

Dave Plowman London SW
To e-mail, change noise into sound.
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On 24/10/2019 15:21, Dave Plowman (News) wrote:


I'd have thought 'decent' would cover both saw and blade. ;-) Although
many these days come with tipped blades that are a reasonable compromise.

Go to a site such as Screwfix and you will find that many circular saws,
irrespective of the brand or price, are sold with 24 tooth blades (some
as low as 10 or 12 teeth and a few up at 30). As I suspect with the OPs
jig saw blades, these have too few teeth for a quality cut in laminate
and a blade with 60+ teeth would be more suited.

--
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Default Cutting plastic coated MDF

On 24/10/2019 07:29, Jimk wrote:
Steve Walker Wrote in message:
On 23/10/2019 19:35, Jimk wrote:
"Dave Plowman (News)" Wrote in message:
In article al.NET,
pete wrote:
I?m trying to cut some plastic coated MDF (Melamine?) using a powered
jig saw and it?s chipping the plastic like mad. A friend told me there
is a special blade for doing this. Can anyone advise me? I?m a rank
amateur with only a jig saw and a planer to my my name. I don?t want to
buy any further power tools as I?d not have any real use for them.

Do remember a jigsaw cuts on the upstroke, so for best results cut from
the underside. But it's simply not the best tool for the job. A decent
circular saw will give a near perfect cut.


If cut upside down...

He said he doesn't want to buy any more gear...


He could go mad and cut it with a hand-saw.

SteveW




OOI where's my post that you replied to gone? I see it on Google
gropes but not in this thread on Plusnet (giganews I
believe)?


Still seems to be there for me - on Eternal September.

SteveW
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