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-   -   Well I've never done that before (https://www.diybanter.com/woodworking/331995-well-ive-never-done-before.html)

Steve Turner[_3_] November 19th 11 05:37 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing wasn't cutting
worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw before. I was
uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed to get the thing
turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check the direction of the
teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)

--
"Our beer goes through thousands of quality Czechs every day."
(From a Shiner Bock billboard I saw in Austin some years ago)
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/

Larry W November 19th 11 06:28 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
In article ,
Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing wasn't cutting
worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw before. I was
uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed to get the thing
turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check the direction of the
teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)

--
"Our beer goes through thousands of quality Czechs every day."
(From a Shiner Bock billboard I saw in Austin some years ago)
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/


Steve, it it makes you feel any better, you're not the first one to do that,
either.


--
When the game is over, the pawn and the king are returned to the same box.

Larry Wasserman - Baltimore Maryland - lwasserm(a)sdf. lonestar.org

Swingman November 19th 11 07:31 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...

--
www.eWoodShop.com
Last update: 4/15/2010
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
http://gplus.to/eWoodShop

Gordon Shumway November 19th 11 07:33 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 18:28:21 +0000 (UTC),
(Larry W) wrote:

In article ,
Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing wasn't cutting
worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw before. I was
uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed to get the thing
turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check the direction of the
teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)

--
"Our beer goes through thousands of quality Czechs every day."
(From a Shiner Bock billboard I saw in Austin some years ago)
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/

Steve, it it makes you feel any better, you're not the first one to do that,
either.


He will not be the last either.

willshak November 19th 11 07:36 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
Steve Turner wrote the following:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Why didn't you just turn the bandsaw around and feed from the other
side? :-)

--

Bill
In Hamptonburgh, NY
In the original Orange County. Est. 1683
To email, remove the double zeroes after @

Leon[_7_] November 19th 11 08:10 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Did you do that last night at about 8 o'clock during your beer gusseling
session with your other buddies? :~)

I was invited but lacked the proper equipment and was therefore
dismissed with a laugh. LOL

Leon[_7_] November 19th 11 08:13 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...



Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale??? so was I, and ended up with
a heck of a head ache.

Shiner Holiday Cheer is pretty darn good considering it is not a stout.

BTY I am currently hooked on Buffalo Bills Blueberry Stout. Yes Blueberry!

Leon[_7_] November 19th 11 08:15 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 1:36 PM, willshak wrote:
Steve Turner wrote the following:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my
bandsaw before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow
I managed to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to
me to check the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON,
no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Why didn't you just turn the bandsaw around and feed from the other
side? :-)


That would be upside down, that kind of backwards. ;~)

Dave[_52_] November 19th 11 09:08 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 11:37:05 -0600, Steve Turner
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing wasn't cutting
worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw before.


Not a bandsaw, but I've experienced essentially the same problem. I
was trying to drill a hole sight unseen under a desk sight in the
process of running computer cables. I couldn't understand why it was
so difficult to drill. After ten minutes, I decided to run down to the
store and buy a completely new drill bit and tried it again. Still the
same problem. It took me well over half an hour with a whole lot of
cursing and swearing to realize that I had the drill in reverse. I
really am an idiot sometimes.

An no, never experienced the reversed tablesaw blade problem. G

-MIKE- November 19th 11 10:33 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/11 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...


You guys didn't notice that caps had been "reapplied?" :-)


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com

---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


Steve Turner[_3_] November 19th 11 10:34 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 2:15 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:36 PM, willshak wrote:
Steve Turner wrote the following:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my
bandsaw before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow
I managed to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to
me to check the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON,
no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Why didn't you just turn the bandsaw around and feed from the other
side? :-)


That would be upside down, that kind of backwards. ;~)


The voice of experience, Leon? :-)

--
Free bad advice available here.
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/

-MIKE- November 19th 11 10:34 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/11 2:10 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Did you do that last night at about 8 o'clock during your beer gusseling
session with your other buddies? :~)

I was invited but lacked the proper equipment and was therefore
dismissed with a laugh. LOL



We missed you. Get a webcam you technophobe. :-p


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com

---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


-MIKE- November 19th 11 10:36 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/11 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...



Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale???


Noooooo.....
http://www.greatlakesbrewing.com/beer/an-exceptional-family-of-beers/seasonal/christmas-ale


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com

---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


Steve Turner[_3_] November 19th 11 10:43 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...



Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale??? so was I, and ended up with a heck
of a head ache.

Shiner Holiday Cheer is pretty darn good considering it is not a stout.

BTY I am currently hooked on Buffalo Bills Blueberry Stout. Yes Blueberry!


I had a headache this morning too (which is when my bandsaw was making fun of
me), and I only had that one Christmas Ale! I agree with Karl; it's Mike's
fault. I mean who in their right mind would turn a bandsaw blade inside out?

--
"Our beer goes through thousands of quality Czechs every day."
(From a Shiner Bock billboard I saw in Austin some years ago)
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/

Theodore Edward Stosterone November 20th 11 12:15 AM

Well I've never done that before
 
On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 11:37:05 -0600, Steve Turner
wrote:

I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw ....


I put a ribbed condom on inside-out once. The word "churro" comes to
mind.

Be careful out there. :-)


You're telling me....

tiredofspam November 20th 11 12:49 AM

Well I've never done that before
 
I did that on my circular saw. I am a lefty and bought a porter cable
left hand saw many years ago. I needed to put a ply blade on to cut up a
couple of cabinets I got sitting by a curb. I needed to cut the toe
kicks out to put wheels on the bottm.

Being a left hand saw, I mounted the label so it was visible. Boy the
smoke... did I feel stupid...

On 11/19/2011 12:37 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Larry Jaques[_4_] November 20th 11 01:00 AM

Well I've never done that before
 
On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 14:36:24 -0500, willshak
wrote:

Steve Turner wrote the following:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Why didn't you just turn the bandsaw around and feed from the other
side? :-)


Yeah, and flip the plug in the wall if it was going the wrong
direction, too.

--
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw

Larry Jaques[_4_] November 20th 11 01:06 AM

Well I've never done that before
 
On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 16:15:15 -0800, Theodore Edward Stosterone
wrote:

On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 11:37:05 -0600, Steve Turner
wrote:

I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw ....


I put a ribbed condom on inside-out once. The word "churro" comes to
mind.


That must have hurt, putting it down your urethra like that. What'd
you use, a .22 pistol cleaning rod? YEEOWCH!

--
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw

-MIKE- November 20th 11 02:45 AM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/11 4:43 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:

Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale??? so was I, and ended up with
a heck
of a head ache.

Shiner Holiday Cheer is pretty darn good considering it is not a stout.

BTY I am currently hooked on Buffalo Bills Blueberry Stout. Yes
Blueberry!


I had a headache this morning too (which is when my bandsaw was making
fun of me), and I only had that one Christmas Ale! I agree with Karl;
it's Mike's fault. I mean who in their right mind would turn a bandsaw
blade inside out?


Hey, I have big shoulders... if it helps you save face. :-p

FWIW.... 1st time I got a blade that was "flipped" like that,
I dang near called the company to complain.


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com

---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 05:00 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 4:36 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/19/11 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to
check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)

I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...



Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale???


Noooooo.....
http://www.greatlakesbrewing.com/beer/an-exceptional-family-of-beers/seasonal/christmas-ale




Saw the bottle last night! ;~)

Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 05:02 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 4:43 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to
check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)

I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...



Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale??? so was I, and ended up with
a heck
of a head ache.

Shiner Holiday Cheer is pretty darn good considering it is not a stout.

BTY I am currently hooked on Buffalo Bills Blueberry Stout. Yes
Blueberry!


I had a headache this morning too (which is when my bandsaw was making
fun of me), and I only had that one Christmas Ale! I agree with Karl;
it's Mike's fault. I mean who in their right mind would turn a bandsaw
blade inside out?


Oddly I normally don't have a head ache after a few beers, but I tried
Samuel Aiems Christmas Ale and one bottle gave me a head ache.

Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 05:03 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 8:45 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/19/11 4:43 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:

Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale??? so was I, and ended up with
a heck
of a head ache.

Shiner Holiday Cheer is pretty darn good considering it is not a stout.

BTY I am currently hooked on Buffalo Bills Blueberry Stout. Yes
Blueberry!


I had a headache this morning too (which is when my bandsaw was making
fun of me), and I only had that one Christmas Ale! I agree with Karl;
it's Mike's fault. I mean who in their right mind would turn a bandsaw
blade inside out?


Hey, I have big shoulders... if it helps you save face. :-p

FWIW.... 1st time I got a blade that was "flipped" like that,
I dang near called the company to complain.



Now that would have been funny and embarrassing.

Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 05:05 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 4:34 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:15 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:36 PM, willshak wrote:
Steve Turner wrote the following:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my
bandsaw before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow
I managed to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to
me to check the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON,
no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Why didn't you just turn the bandsaw around and feed from the other
side? :-)


That would be upside down, that kind of backwards. ;~)


The voice of experience, Leon? :-)


ROTFL almost, I noticed after mounting the blade but long before
adjusting the guides.

Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 05:07 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 4:34 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/19/11 2:10 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Did you do that last night at about 8 o'clock during your beer gusseling
session with your other buddies? :~)

I was invited but lacked the proper equipment and was therefore
dismissed with a laugh. LOL



We missed you. Get a webcam you technophobe. :-p




One day I am going to get an iPad, Swingman says that he has heard of
some one using one for that purpose and was happy with the results...

Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 05:08 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 7:06 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 16:15:15 -0800, Theodore Edward Stosterone
wrote:

On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 11:37:05 -0600, Steve Turner
wrote:

I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw ....


I put a ribbed condom on inside-out once. The word "churro" comes to
mind.


That must have hurt, putting it down your urethra like that. What'd
you use, a .22 pistol cleaning rod? YEEOWCH!

--
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw


A real man would use a 12ga.

But where the hell do you come up with these ideas????

Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 05:11 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/19/2011 6:49 PM, tiredofspam wrote:
I did that on my circular saw. I am a lefty and bought a porter cable
left hand saw many years ago. I needed to put a ply blade on to cut up a
couple of cabinets I got sitting by a curb. I needed to cut the toe
kicks out to put wheels on the bottm.

Being a left hand saw, I mounted the label so it was visible. Boy the
smoke... did I feel stupid...

On 11/19/2011 12:37 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


I guess there shouled be an addition to that long list of left handed
pencils, screw drivers, wrenches, etc., we need to add the left labeled
saw blade. LOL

-MIKE- November 20th 11 06:07 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/11 11:02 AM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 4:43 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my
bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I
managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to
check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade
could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)

I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that
Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...



Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale??? so was I, and ended up with
a heck
of a head ache.

Shiner Holiday Cheer is pretty darn good considering it is not a stout.

BTY I am currently hooked on Buffalo Bills Blueberry Stout. Yes
Blueberry!


I had a headache this morning too (which is when my bandsaw was making
fun of me), and I only had that one Christmas Ale! I agree with Karl;
it's Mike's fault. I mean who in their right mind would turn a bandsaw
blade inside out?


Oddly I normally don't have a head ache after a few beers, but I tried
Samuel Aiems Christmas Ale and one bottle gave me a head ache.


It wasn't the Sam Adams that have you the headache.
It was the four *good* beers it took to get taste of Sam Adams out of
your mouth. :-)


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com

---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


Steve Turner[_3_] November 20th 11 06:48 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/2011 11:05 AM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 4:34 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:15 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:36 PM, willshak wrote:
Steve Turner wrote the following:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my
bandsaw before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow
I managed to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to
me to check the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON,
no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)


Why didn't you just turn the bandsaw around and feed from the other
side? :-)


That would be upside down, that kind of backwards. ;~)


The voice of experience, Leon? :-)


ROTFL almost, I noticed after mounting the blade but long before adjusting the
guides.


In my defense I'd removed the blade and coiled it up for cleaning (tossed the
blade in a round plastic tub, sprayed with oven cleaner, and scrubbed), so the
saw was already adjusted for that particular blade when I uncoiled and
reinstalled it. I really had no reason to think I couldn't just fire up the
saw and start cutting. :-)

--
Repeat after me:
"I am we Todd it. I am sofa king we Todd it."
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/

Steve Turner[_3_] November 20th 11 07:00 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/2011 12:07 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/20/11 11:02 AM, Leon wrote:
Oddly I normally don't have a head ache after a few beers, but I tried
Samuel Aiems Christmas Ale and one bottle gave me a head ache.


It wasn't the Sam Adams that have you the headache.
It was the four *good* beers it took to get taste of Sam Adams out of your
mouth. :-)


Bwaa hah hah! I used to drink Sam Adams a decade or so again (whenever it
first started showing up in my area), but only for a couple of years and I
haven't had one in a LONG time. I tried a Boston Lager a few weeks ago and was
rather repulsed... I actually used to drink this stuff? I like a beer with
flavor but Good Lord they don't need to beat you over the head with it!

--
"Our beer goes through thousands of quality Czechs every day."
(From a Shiner Bock billboard I saw in Austin some years ago)
To reply, eat the taco.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/

Swingman November 20th 11 07:08 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/2011 12:07 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/20/11 11:02 AM, Leon wrote:


Oddly I normally don't have a head ache after a few beers, but I tried
Samuel Aiems Christmas Ale and one bottle gave me a head ache.


It wasn't the Sam Adams that have you the headache.
It was the four *good* beers it took to get taste of Sam Adams out of
your mouth. :-)


Like licking a wet dog ...

--
www.eWoodShop.com
Last update: 4/15/2010
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
http://gplus.to/eWoodShop

Swingman November 20th 11 07:09 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/2011 11:08 AM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 7:06 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:


That must have hurt, putting it down your urethra like that. What'd
you use, a .22 pistol cleaning rod? YEEOWCH!

--
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw


A real man would use a 12ga.

But where the hell do you come up with these ideas????


ROTFLMAOOOOOOouch ....

--
www.eWoodShop.com
Last update: 4/15/2010
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
http://gplus.to/eWoodShop

Leon[_7_] November 20th 11 08:12 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/2011 12:07 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/20/11 11:02 AM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 4:43 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/19/2011 11:37 AM, Steve Turner wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install
the
blade backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing
wasn't cutting worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my
bandsaw
before. I was uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I
managed
to get the thing turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to
check
the direction of the teeth while installing it. Come ON, no blade
could
possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. :-)

I'm blaming it all it on Mike. I cut the birds mouth in the wrong
place
on six rafters this morning ... just what the hell was in that
Christmas
Ale?? :)

Then again, it may have been that Texas Red Tongue Oil ...



Was he drinking Sam Adams Christmas Ale??? so was I, and ended up with
a heck
of a head ache.

Shiner Holiday Cheer is pretty darn good considering it is not a stout.

BTY I am currently hooked on Buffalo Bills Blueberry Stout. Yes
Blueberry!

I had a headache this morning too (which is when my bandsaw was making
fun of me), and I only had that one Christmas Ale! I agree with Karl;
it's Mike's fault. I mean who in their right mind would turn a bandsaw
blade inside out?


Oddly I normally don't have a head ache after a few beers, but I tried
Samuel Aiems Christmas Ale and one bottle gave me a head ache.


It wasn't the Sam Adams that have you the headache.
It was the four *good* beers it took to get taste of Sam Adams out of
your mouth. :-)



My favorites at the moment are Southern Star, Buried Hatchet. That is a
chocolaty, coffee, molasses flavored stout. My son introduced this one
to me and now I have an expensive habit. Prior to drinking this beer I
did not see the point in drinking beer.
This is made in a tiny brewery that did not exist 5 years ago.

My on find and a favorite is a Buffalo Bills, Blueberry Stout.



Swingman November 20th 11 08:21 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/2011 2:12 PM, Leon wrote:

My favorites at the moment are Southern Star, Buried Hatchet. That is a
chocolaty, coffee, molasses flavored stout. My son introduced this one
to me and now I have an expensive habit. Prior to drinking this beer I
did not see the point in drinking beer.


Anyone make a beer with nicotine in it?

I could then drink a beer and not keep reaching for a cigarette after 20
years.

--
www.eWoodShop.com
Last update: 4/15/2010
KarlCaillouet@ (the obvious)
http://gplus.to/eWoodShop

Larry Jaques[_4_] November 20th 11 08:23 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On Sun, 20 Nov 2011 11:08:59 -0600, Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet
wrote:

On 11/19/2011 7:06 PM, Larry Jaques wrote:
On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 16:15:15 -0800, Theodore Edward Stosterone
wrote:

On Sat, 19 Nov 2011 11:37:05 -0600, Steve Turner
wrote:

I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw ....

I put a ribbed condom on inside-out once. The word "churro" comes to
mind.


That must have hurt, putting it down your urethra like that. What'd
you use, a .22 pistol cleaning rod? YEEOWCH!

--
The reasonable man adapts himself to the world; the unreasonable
one persists in trying to adapt the world to himself. Therefore,
all progress depends on the unreasonable man.
-- George Bernard Shaw


A real man would use a 12ga.

But where the hell do you come up with these ideas????


I turned my literal mode to ON and read his "condom on inside".
The rest is history.

P.S: Multiple exclamation points or question marks are overkill.

--
Happiness is not a station you arrive at, but a manner of traveling.
-- Margaret Lee Runbeck

Josepi[_23_] November 20th 11 08:44 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
That a long time to wait between cigarettes!

-------------
"Swingman" wrote in message
...
Anyone make a beer with nicotine in it?

I could then drink a beer and not keep reaching for a cigarette after 20
years.



-MIKE- November 20th 11 08:51 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/11 1:08 PM, Swingman wrote:
On 11/20/2011 12:07 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/20/11 11:02 AM, Leon wrote:


Oddly I normally don't have a head ache after a few beers, but I tried
Samuel Aiems Christmas Ale and one bottle gave me a head ache.


It wasn't the Sam Adams that have you the headache.
It was the four *good* beers it took to get taste of Sam Adams out of
your mouth. :-)


Like licking a wet dog ...


Aaaaand we've come full circle. :-)
You need a good beer after 16 or 17 hours of sleep.


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com

---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


-MIKE- November 20th 11 08:55 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On 11/20/11 2:12 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/20/2011 12:07 PM, -MIKE- wrote:
On 11/20/11 11:02 AM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 4:43 PM, Steve Turner wrote:
On 11/19/2011 2:13 PM, Leon wrote:
On 11/19/2011 1:31 PM, Swingman wrote:


My favorites at the moment are Southern Star, Buried Hatchet. That is a
chocolaty, coffee, molasses flavored stout.


That sound right up my alley. Somebody should send me one.
EHEM!
I say, SOMEBODY SHOULD SEND ME ONE!


--

-MIKE-

"Playing is not something I do at night, it's my function in life"
--Elvin Jones (1927-2004)
--
http://mikedrums.com

---remove "DOT" ^^^^ to reply


RonB[_2_] November 20th 11 09:51 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
On Nov 19, 11:37*am, Steve Turner
wrote:
I suppose all of us at one time or another have managed to install the blade
backwards on our tablesaw and wondered why the hell the thing wasn't cutting
worth a damn, but I've never had it happen on my bandsaw before. *I was
uncoiling a 1/4" blade from storage and somehow I managed to get the thing
turned inside out, and it never occurred to me to check the direction of the
teeth while installing it. *Come ON, no blade could possibly be THAT dull!

Be careful out there. *:-)

--
"Our beer goes through thousands of quality Czechs every day."
(From a Shiner Bock billboard I saw in Austin some years ago)
To reply, eat the taco.http://www.flickr.com/photos/bbqboyee/


Been there, done that on both table saw and band saw. Actually on the
band saw I caught myself but not before I had done most of the work of
installing it.

Dumb, dumb, dumb, dumb.....

Mike Marlow[_2_] November 20th 11 10:48 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
Leon wrote:


My favorites at the moment are Southern Star, Buried Hatchet. That
is a chocolaty, coffee, molasses flavored stout. My son introduced
this one to me and now I have an expensive habit. Prior to drinking
this beer I did not see the point in drinking beer.
This is made in a tiny brewery that did not exist 5 years ago.

My on find and a favorite is a Buffalo Bills, Blueberry Stout.


Oh man - lots of work to do on you Leon! Beer is not about chocolate, or
molasses, or coffee, or freakin' blueberryes! You've been hanging out with
the Ladies of the Garden Club too much! Flavored beers! Of all things...
Lots of work to do on you...

--

-Mike-




Puckdropper[_2_] November 20th 11 11:00 PM

Well I've never done that before
 
Leon lcb11211@swbelldotnet wrote in
:


I guess there shouled be an addition to that long list of left handed
pencils, screw drivers, wrenches, etc., we need to add the left
labeled saw blade. LOL


Instead of a left-labeled saw blade, they could make a universal blade that
comes with stickers that you apply yourself. Cooler stickers would also be
available, at additional price. *wink*

Puckdropper
--
Make it to fit, don't make it fit.


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