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  #1   Report Post  
L. Wilson
 
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Default Any Grizzly bandsaw owners ?

I am considering the new Grizzly G0513 and wanted the opinion of other
Grizzly bandsaw owners. I currently own a Grizzly dust collector and am
happy with the quality of it.

Thanks,
LFW

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  #2   Report Post  
lex
 
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Default Any Grizzly bandsaw owners ?

Have had one (14" w/ riser) for about 2 years now... so far it has done
everything that I've asked of it. Including some pretty serious
re-sawing which made me a bit nervous, but all went well.

With small blades, it runs smooth as silk... However, deeper blades
Say, 1/2" or more, it kind of fludumps along, almost like the weld on
the blade was too heavy.
The stock fence was a piece of crap, fabricated a replacement.
The dust collection was wholey inadaquate, but there was a cure for that
too.

As the saw sits right now, I'm very happy with it for the money spent.

Good Luck,
Lex

L. Wilson wrote:
I am considering the new Grizzly G0513 and wanted the opinion of other
Grizzly bandsaw owners. I currently own a Grizzly dust collector and am
happy with the quality of it.

Thanks,
LFW

use this email address for reply



  #3   Report Post  
Jim
 
Posts: n/a
Default Any Grizzly bandsaw owners ?

I also have the 14" w/riser. I had a terrible time with it using the 1/2
and 3/4" blades I bought from grizzly. After I switched to the
Timberwolf blades however, all my "setup" problems went away and it
worked great. Do yourself a HUGE favor and don't even attempt to set it
up with a grizzly blade. It didn't help that this was my first bandsaw
and I didn't understand what was blade problems and what was set up
problems.

I agree that the old bandsaw fence is all but useless. The new fence on
the white Grizzly looks significantly better.

As for power, I ripped 2x10s (to make 1/2" x 10s) in pine easily. The
largest hardwood I've cut so far is some 6" white oak which it did almost
as fast as I could rip it on the table saw.

Jim


lex wrote in :

Have had one (14" w/ riser) for about 2 years now... so far it has
done everything that I've asked of it. Including some pretty serious
re-sawing which made me a bit nervous, but all went well.

With small blades, it runs smooth as silk... However, deeper blades
Say, 1/2" or more, it kind of fludumps along, almost like the weld on
the blade was too heavy.
The stock fence was a piece of crap, fabricated a replacement.
The dust collection was wholey inadaquate, but there was a cure for
that too.

As the saw sits right now, I'm very happy with it for the money spent.

Good Luck,
Lex

L. Wilson wrote:
I am considering the new Grizzly G0513 and wanted the opinion of
other Grizzly bandsaw owners. I currently own a Grizzly dust
collector and am happy with the quality of it.

Thanks,
LFW

use this email address for reply





  #4   Report Post  
Al Reid
 
Posts: n/a
Default Any Grizzly bandsaw owners ?

Great advice! I was thinking that I made a HUGE mistake by purchasing the
Grizzly G0555 until I took a fellow NGers advice and bought some "Timberwolf" blades.

--
Al Reid

"It ain't what you don't know that gets you into trouble. It's what you know
for sure that just ain't so." --- Mark Twain

"Jim" wrote in message ...
I also have the 14" w/riser. I had a terrible time with it using the 1/2
and 3/4" blades I bought from grizzly. After I switched to the
Timberwolf blades however, all my "setup" problems went away and it
worked great. Do yourself a HUGE favor and don't even attempt to set it
up with a grizzly blade. It didn't help that this was my first bandsaw
and I didn't understand what was blade problems and what was set up
problems.

I agree that the old bandsaw fence is all but useless. The new fence on
the white Grizzly looks significantly better.

As for power, I ripped 2x10s (to make 1/2" x 10s) in pine easily. The
largest hardwood I've cut so far is some 6" white oak which it did almost
as fast as I could rip it on the table saw.

Jim


lex wrote in :

Have had one (14" w/ riser) for about 2 years now... so far it has
done everything that I've asked of it. Including some pretty serious
re-sawing which made me a bit nervous, but all went well.

With small blades, it runs smooth as silk... However, deeper blades
Say, 1/2" or more, it kind of fludumps along, almost like the weld on
the blade was too heavy.
The stock fence was a piece of crap, fabricated a replacement.
The dust collection was wholey inadaquate, but there was a cure for
that too.

As the saw sits right now, I'm very happy with it for the money spent.

Good Luck,
Lex

L. Wilson wrote:
I am considering the new Grizzly G0513 and wanted the opinion of
other Grizzly bandsaw owners. I currently own a Grizzly dust
collector and am happy with the quality of it.

Thanks,
LFW

use this email address for reply







  #5   Report Post  
Mike Reed
 
Posts: n/a
Default Any Grizzly bandsaw owners ?

I have the 14" w/out the riser. I have had similar experiences as
these guys (good saw, lame fence, no big whoop).

I did have one problem though, a hidden manufacturing defect caused
the tensioning mechanism to self-destruct after two years. There was a
screw hole drilled through the sliding track, and the screw was tight
against a moving part, burrowing into it.

Grizzly sent me replacement parts free of charge even though I was out
of warranty. The saw has fully recovered and, not surprisingly, is a
lot easier to tension now

Certainly worth the $279 I paid for the saw.

-Mike

Jim wrote in message ...
I also have the 14" w/riser. I had a terrible time with it using the 1/2
and 3/4" blades I bought from grizzly. After I switched to the
Timberwolf blades however, all my "setup" problems went away and it
worked great. Do yourself a HUGE favor and don't even attempt to set it
up with a grizzly blade. It didn't help that this was my first bandsaw
and I didn't understand what was blade problems and what was set up
problems.

I agree that the old bandsaw fence is all but useless. The new fence on
the white Grizzly looks significantly better.

As for power, I ripped 2x10s (to make 1/2" x 10s) in pine easily. The
largest hardwood I've cut so far is some 6" white oak which it did almost
as fast as I could rip it on the table saw.

Jim


lex wrote in :

Have had one (14" w/ riser) for about 2 years now... so far it has
done everything that I've asked of it. Including some pretty serious
re-sawing which made me a bit nervous, but all went well.

With small blades, it runs smooth as silk... However, deeper blades
Say, 1/2" or more, it kind of fludumps along, almost like the weld on
the blade was too heavy.
The stock fence was a piece of crap, fabricated a replacement.
The dust collection was wholey inadaquate, but there was a cure for
that too.

As the saw sits right now, I'm very happy with it for the money spent.

Good Luck,
Lex

L. Wilson wrote:
I am considering the new Grizzly G0513 and wanted the opinion of
other Grizzly bandsaw owners. I currently own a Grizzly dust
collector and am happy with the quality of it.

Thanks,
LFW

use this email address for reply






  #6   Report Post  
Jaimesummer
 
Posts: n/a
Default Any Grizzly bandsaw owners ?

Have had my 19 inch 5014 for about 4 months now. Ordered it when the
price was 950 and waited while it was backordered. They dropped the
price to 900 so I opted to go to the end of the line and wait. It is
my first bandsaw but it works flawlessly so far. Don't yet have a
tablesaw, just a radial arm saw so I now do alot of the more dangerous
tasks on the bandsaw, what a relief! Got 3 timberwolf blades (3/16,
1/2 and 1 inch), I do some green wood cutting of logs after using my
alaska mill. The quality is pretty good in my opinion, the fence
looks a little lightweight, but have had no problems. Cuts straight
as an arrow with the half inch blade with no detectable angle from the
fench angle and the 2 HP motor seems happy as a clam. Had to put my
own cord on, got 15 feet of 10/3, easy to wire in. Made a resaw fence
from 3/4 inch birch ply and a 2 by 4 foot outfeed table so far. Will
make a circle cutting jig soon. Have cut some redwood sticks about 3
inches in diameter into "veneer". After flattening one side, piece of
cake to slice the redwood into 1/16 inch slices, I was trying to get
it thin enough to be translucent for a 3 sided wall lampshade after
seeing the little piece on DIY about the guy who starts with a 150
pound stump and makes a 1/4 pound, very thin lampshade. The red part
of the redwood needs to be much thinner than the sapwood to be
transparent so have to do some sanding after cutting to less than
0.050 inches. This saw costs a little more than most 14 inchers, but
I didn't like the idea of adding a block (I have 12 inch resaw
height), wanted a bigger table, most importantly wanted to use a 1
inch blade for resawing with proper tension and you can never have
enough horsepower. For $50, it was easy for me to justify the larger
table and cutting width, you have to decide if it is worth $100.
good luck,
jaime
  #7   Report Post  
Paul
 
Posts: n/a
Default Any Grizzly bandsaw owners ?

(Jaimesummer) wrote in message om...
Have had my 19 inch 5014 for about 4 months now. Ordered it when the
price was 950 and waited while it was backordered. They dropped the
price to 900 so I opted to go to the end of the line and wait. It is
my first bandsaw but it works flawlessly so far. Don't yet have a
tablesaw, just a radial arm saw so I now do alot of the more dangerous
tasks on the bandsaw, what a relief! Got 3 timberwolf blades (3/16,
1/2 and 1 inch), I do some green wood cutting of logs after using my
alaska mill. The quality is pretty good in my opinion, the fence
looks a little lightweight, but have had no problems. Cuts straight
as an arrow with the half inch blade with no detectable angle from the
fench angle and the 2 HP motor seems happy as a clam. Had to put my
own cord on, got 15 feet of 10/3, easy to wire in. Made a resaw fence
from 3/4 inch birch ply and a 2 by 4 foot outfeed table so far. Will
make a circle cutting jig soon. Have cut some redwood sticks about 3
inches in diameter into "veneer". After flattening one side, piece of
cake to slice the redwood into 1/16 inch slices, I was trying to get
it thin enough to be translucent for a 3 sided wall lampshade after
seeing the little piece on DIY about the guy who starts with a 150
pound stump and makes a 1/4 pound, very thin lampshade. The red part
of the redwood needs to be much thinner than the sapwood to be
transparent so have to do some sanding after cutting to less than
0.050 inches. This saw costs a little more than most 14 inchers, but
I didn't like the idea of adding a block (I have 12 inch resaw
height), wanted a bigger table, most importantly wanted to use a 1
inch blade for resawing with proper tension and you can never have
enough horsepower. For $50, it was easy for me to justify the larger
table and cutting width, you have to decide if it is worth $100.
good luck,
jaime



Had the 14" fopr a few years and it was fine. In a fit of spending
power I bought the 15" and sold the 14". The 15" (welded style
frame) is good too and the fence is better by far. I like two speeds
too as I use the slower speed for cutting brass. (I make church
stuff as well as furniture). Amen to the Timberwolf comment!
Wish I hadn't been such as spending wimp and had bought the 16". It
looks like a really solid item.
Paul
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