Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and
a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper |
#2
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Puckdropper wrote:
I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. I wish you had video...I would never have expected You to be the one reporting this! : ) A reciprocating saw might have been a good choice too--but evidently you were in a hurry! Glad you weren't banged up more than you were. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper |
#3
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/17/2021 3:48 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper That is why some safety glasses come with side shields. In most manufacturing companies where I have worked, the standard issue safe glasses have side shields. As you said if you are working in a rain of sparks you should have been using a full face shield. This applies to corrosive liquids also. For the routine handling of corrosive liquids you should always use safety glasses with side shields. Where you may get splashing, face shields are a must. Many years ago when I was working in a lab, one technician was digesting an organic in a crucible. It did not go as fast as he thought and leaned over and looked into the crucible, Unfortunate just at that moment it splattered. Fortunately the tech had side shield safety glass, but for weeks afterwards had yellow spots all over his face from the nitric acid. All over except behind the side shields and eye glasses. Safety glasses with side shields are required by federal government workplace regulations for these industries. |
#4
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote:
I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. https://www.homedepot.com/p/DIABLO-1...L01F/202831056 For a railing, I probably would have grabbed my angle grinder with either a metal grinding wheel or cut-off wheel. I was going to get rid of my old Delta miter saw when I bought the Bosch glider, but I decided to save it for cutting crappy wood and metal. Years ago I had access to a radial arm saw to cut through steel plates up to a 1/2" thick. Using slow, shallow cuts on a tightly secured plate, you can make some surprisingly smooth and accurate cuts. |
#5
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/17/2021 1:48 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've got a hand held 9 inch circular saw that is supposed to be for cutting steel. I have used it on stainless sheet. That is hard on blades. Its been used for pieces of aluminum plate to big to put on the horizontal bandsaw. For that it works a treat. I haven't yet used it for cutting plain steel. I'll report back when I do. I've got a 4x8 sheet of A36 on my welding table that really should be cut down to 3x7. Maybe someday. For years I had a cheap Black & Decker circular saw from K-Mart. I kept an abrasive blade on it for cutting steel all the time. I don't know that I cut miles of steel with it, but it was my primary cutting tool for steel for a long time. Even after I got a torch the abrasive saw was often the better tool for the job. It cut the parts for hundreds of small satellite dish roof mounts. Somebody mentioned a reciprocating saw. I've got two of those. An old Sears that I used as needed for 15-20 years. I bought it because I needed one to finish a job, was broke, and had a Sears credit card. Its cut a lot of things including a little bit of steel. When the blade holder broke I bought a Super Sawzall. Then I found a replacement holder for the Sears one. I never thought they were great for cutting steel. Sure with the right blade they do the job, but they are rarely my first choice if I can get another tool into the space. They are like the Swiss Army knife of cutting tools in my opinion. Capable of a lot of things, but not really the best tool for any of them. If I do use one for steel I often start with a fresh Milwaukee "Torch" blade and find myself finishing with one of my old Lennox bi metal blades. I really should throw those torch blades away, but I have a whole pack of them brand new still in the package. I hate to throw away new tools. You know when it comes to eye protection I was terrible over the years. I was also pretty lucky. Most of my life I grabbed a tool and tackled the job. Its only since I changed from contracting to machining that I have become really conscious of the dangers. Sure I always kept a pair or 3 of the old Uvex safety glasses in my truck, but often that's where they spent the entire week. -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
#6
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/17/2021 8:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. https://www.homedepot.com/p/DIABLO-1...L01F/202831056 For a railing, I probably would have grabbed my angle grinder with either a metal grinding wheel or cut-off wheel. I was going to get rid of my old Delta miter saw when I bought the Bosch glider, but I decided to save it for cutting crappy wood and metal. Years ago I had access to a radial arm saw to cut through steel plates up to a 1/2" thick. Using slow, shallow cuts on a tightly secured plate, you can make some surprisingly smooth and accurate cuts. I noticed some time back one of the industrial companies makes a table saw for cutting steel. I've got a big broken DeWalt out back that dwarfs my Delta. I've often thought about putting a steel slat table on and converting to some sort of slow speed drive. -- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
#7
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote:
Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Not chip related, but my most dramatic "Thank God I was wearing safety glasses" moment came when I was building my first deck. I didn't need to wear corrective lessons back then, but I worked at a factory so wearing safety glasses was a practice that I followed at work and at home. I was playing around with the railing for the deck stairs, trying to figure out what look I wanted. I attached a 2 x4 to the posts with some bar clamps and stepped back to take a look. Since there are 9 steps from the ground to the landing, one of the bar clamps was up pretty high. I should mention that I had grabbed a 36" clamp and attached it so that the bar was sticking out into the yard. As I walked back towards the stairs, my vision was focused on the railing. The 1/4" x 3/4" end of the steel bar didn't even register in my brain. When I was about 30" from the stairs, my head snapped back as the end of the bar hit the right lens of my safety glasses dead center. The bar deflected upwards and put a nasty gouge in my forehead. By the time I realized what had happened, blood was dripping down over my eye and I was shaking like a leaf. It took me a few seconds to figure out that my eye was OK and that it was just blood that was obstructing my vision. The lens was cracked, but had held and had done it's job. I have no doubt that the safety glasses prevented the bar from pushing my eyeball back into my head. 30+ years later, it still makes me a little queasy just thinking about it. |
#8
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 9:56:35 AM UTC-6, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. https://www.homedepot.com/p/DIABLO-1...L01F/202831056 For a railing, I probably would have grabbed my angle grinder with either a metal grinding wheel or cut-off wheel. I was going to get rid of my old Delta miter saw when I bought the Bosch glider, but I decided to save it for cutting crappy wood and metal. Years ago I had access to a radial arm saw to cut through steel plates up to a 1/2" thick. Using slow, shallow cuts on a tightly secured plate, you can make some surprisingly smooth and accurate cuts. Second this. You can usually pick up an angle grinder (really) cheap on the sale sites. It's a safe way to go. The right blade might cost something. |
#9
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 17 Jan 2021 11:37:53 -0800 (PST), DerbyDad03
wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Not chip related, but my most dramatic "Thank God I was wearing safety glasses" moment came when I was building my first deck. I didn't need to wear corrective lessons back then, but I worked at a factory so wearing safety glasses was a practice that I followed at work and at home. I was playing around with the railing for the deck stairs, trying to figure out what look I wanted. I attached a 2 x4 to the posts with some bar clamps and stepped back to take a look. Since there are 9 steps from the ground to the landing, one of the bar clamps was up pretty high. I should mention that I had grabbed a 36" clamp and attached it so that the bar was sticking out into the yard. As I walked back towards the stairs, my vision was focused on the railing. The 1/4" x 3/4" end of the steel bar didn't even register in my brain. When I was about 30" from the stairs, my head snapped back as the end of the bar hit the right lens of my safety glasses dead center. The bar deflected upwards and put a nasty gouge in my forehead. By the time I realized what had happened, blood was dripping down over my eye and I was shaking like a leaf. It took me a few seconds to figure out that my eye was OK and that it was just blood that was obstructing my vision. The lens was cracked, but had held and had done it's job. I have no doubt that the safety glasses prevented the bar from pushing my eyeball back into my head. 30+ years later, it still makes me a little queasy just thinking about it. An acquaintance was hammering cut nails into his basement wall. Yep, one shattered sending shrapnel into his eye. After a half dozen surgeries they did save his eye but there is lesson in there. Two big mistakes. 1) no eye protection and 2) using a hardened (claw) hammer on hardened cut nails. He won't do that again. |
#10
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sun, 17 Jan 2021 13:48:39 -0800 (PST), Michael
wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 9:56:35 AM UTC-6, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. https://www.homedepot.com/p/DIABLO-1...L01F/202831056 For a railing, I probably would have grabbed my angle grinder with either a metal grinding wheel or cut-off wheel. I was going to get rid of my old Delta miter saw when I bought the Bosch glider, but I decided to save it for cutting crappy wood and metal. Years ago I had access to a radial arm saw to cut through steel plates up to a 1/2" thick. Using slow, shallow cuts on a tightly secured plate, you can make some surprisingly smooth and accurate cuts. Second this. You can usually pick up an angle grinder (really) cheap on the sale sites. It's a safe way to go. The right blade might cost something. Or, in the "any excuse to buy a toy^H^Hool" category, you can get a plasma cutter on Amazon for about 170 bucks. Wouldn't recommend it for a production shop, or anybody who does a lot of metal work, but for once in a blue moon use, should be fine. Does need a compressor and a 35A circuit though. |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. |
#12
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bill wrote in :
I wish you had video...I would never have expected You to be the one reporting this! : ) A reciprocating saw might have been a good choice too--but evidently you were in a hurry! Glad you weren't banged up more than you were. You wouldn't have seen anything anyway. I just realized I have access to a jigsaw, so finishing up this project I'll probably use that. Thanks for the suggestion! Puckdropper |
#13
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw |
#14
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote:
On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. |
#15
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... |
#16
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch
wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. |
#17
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 7:11:25 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. Feel free...I derive pleasure in providing information/education...I have no control over how you choose to accept it...Be well... |
#18
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 17:19:18 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch
wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 7:11:25 PM UTC-5, wrote: On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. Feel free...I derive pleasure in providing information/education...I have no control over how you choose to accept it...Be well... That would be great if 1) you were providing any information/education and 2) Anyone needed your information/education 3) If you weren't trying to show how "smart" you are with your information/education. But feel free to be the newbie here who feels the need to be Captain Obvious. |
#19
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 10:56:30 PM UTC-5, wrote:
On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 17:19:18 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 7:11:25 PM UTC-5, wrote: On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there.. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. Feel free...I derive pleasure in providing information/education...I have no control over how you choose to accept it...Be well... That would be great if 1) you were providing any information/education and 2) Anyone needed your information/education 3) If you weren't trying to show how "smart" you are with your information/education. But feel free to be the newbie here who feels the need to be Captain Obvious. My most humble apologies m'lord. Please provide the portal, and the names of the governing officials, to whom I should present any future comments for vetting/approval prior to posting. Surely my intention is not to offend anyone...Stay well... |
#20
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/18/2021 3:09 PM, Brian Welch wrote:
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... Understood but I meant "cement" not concrete. My blade does not cut through the stones/aggregate in concrete. |
#22
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/18/2021 7:19 PM, Brian Welch wrote:
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 7:11:25 PM UTC-5, wrote: On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. Feel free...I derive pleasure in providing information/education...I have no control over how you choose to accept it...Be well... From my end, all is good. I did mean cement not concrete. |
#23
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tuesday, January 19, 2021 at 11:29:38 AM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
On 1/18/2021 7:19 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 7:11:25 PM UTC-5, wrote: On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel.. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel.. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. Feel free...I derive pleasure in providing information/education...I have no control over how you choose to accept it...Be well... From my end, all is good. I did mean cement not concrete. Thanks for the civil response, it is what I expected from any member of this group. Curious about the application/use of cement as a building material...Looking to learn as well Thanks again |
#24
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tuesday, January 19, 2021 at 11:29:38 AM UTC-5, Leon wrote:
On 1/18/2021 7:19 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 7:11:25 PM UTC-5, wrote: On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel.. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel.. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. Feel free...I derive pleasure in providing information/education...I have no control over how you choose to accept it...Be well... From my end, all is good. I did mean cement not concrete. Maybe for cementitious backer board? That application had escaped me... Best |
#25
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 4:09:24 PM UTC-5, Brian Welch wrote:
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site.. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... Do you feel the same about Kleenex (tissues), Velcro (hook and loop), Sawzall (reciprocating saw), Skilsaw (circular saw), etc.? I do. Lots more for us to be pet-peeved about he https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/...-generic-terms |
#26
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tuesday, January 19, 2021 at 12:16:23 PM UTC-5, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 4:09:24 PM UTC-5, Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel.. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel.. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... Do you feel the same about Kleenex (tissues), Velcro (hook and loop), Sawzall (reciprocating saw), Skilsaw (circular saw), etc.? I do. Lots more for us to be pet-peeved about he https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/...-generic-terms Those don't bother me as they are one and the same, essentially. Band-aid does get me tho' ![]() |
#27
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tuesday, January 19, 2021 at 12:16:23 PM UTC-5, DerbyDad03 wrote:
On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 4:09:24 PM UTC-5, Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel.. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel.. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... Do you feel the same about Kleenex (tissues), Velcro (hook and loop), Sawzall (reciprocating saw), Skilsaw (circular saw), etc.? I do. Lots more for us to be pet-peeved about he https://www.mentalfloss.com/article/...-generic-terms Wow, quite a list...the majority are news to me... Thanks for sharing... |
#28
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/19/2021 10:56 AM, Brian Welch wrote:
On Tuesday, January 19, 2021 at 11:29:38 AM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 7:19 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 7:11:25 PM UTC-5, wrote: On Mon, 18 Jan 2021 13:09:21 -0800 (PST), Brian Welch wrote: On Monday, January 18, 2021 at 3:17:00 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/18/2021 12:41 PM, Brian Welch wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 6:48:47 PM UTC-5, Leon wrote: On 1/17/2021 9:56 AM, DerbyDad03 wrote: On Sunday, January 17, 2021 at 3:48:41 AM UTC-5, Puckdropper wrote: I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I've mostly cut metal on my miter saw using a metal cutting wheel. I don't recall if I ever tried it in a circular but it wouldn't surprised me if I did. I have a circular saw with a metal/cement cutting blade. That is all it is used for. Looks like a large cut off wheel for an angle grinder. Not to pick nits, but never heard of saw blade used for cutting cement. Concrete, yes, masonry most definitely yes... There is also a brand of saw system designed specifically for cutting steel with an electric saw. Evolution. I believe it is possible to bush the arbor down to fit a standard or worm drive saw. https://store.evolutionpowertools.co...e_circular-saw You might also be interested in knowing that concrete is made up of cement, sand , and an regenerate. My point precisely...cement is merely an ingredient in concrete, along with water, sand and aggregate...and occasionally super-plasticizer, retarder, air entraining agent etc... As a concrete contractor for many years, it has been a pet peeve of mine when the terms cement and concrete are used interchangeably... All good... I may be wrong but I believe Leon was calling you a pedant. If not, I'll volunteer. Feel free...I derive pleasure in providing information/education...I have no control over how you choose to accept it...Be well... From my end, all is good. I did mean cement not concrete. Maybe for cementitious backer board? That application had escaped me... Best Yes that. Hardi Plank/board, and or cutting through cinder block with no stone aggregate, cement bricks made from cement and sand. |
#29
![]()
Posted to rec.woodworking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 1/17/2021 3:48 AM, Puckdropper wrote:
I'm installing a railing and need to cut the metal. I've got a hacksaw and a portable circular saw, so naturally which one do I grab? The circular saw. I found out why they say not to cut steel with most blades. It throws hot chips all over and dulls the blade pretty quick. Lesson #2: Safety glasses aren't the end-all of safety. A chip found its way past the glasses and while I'm ok it's a little sore there. I should have been wearing a full face shield but I didn't have one on site. Learned something else... Sanders are awesome at deburring steel. I tried doing it with a file, then switched to the sander and wow what a difference! Got the piece deburred, rounded, and cleaned in a minute rather than taking 5 or more with the file. Puckdropper I have done it by accident but would have never thought to do it intentionally. I had some honeycomb shades and needed to shorten them to fit inside rather than protruding outside the window frame. I checked and the bars seemed to be aluminum so I tightly taped everything together in the closed position and attacked with my table saw using a good carbide blade. I've cut aluminum and brass before using the same method with zero problems. This time my luck ran out because, unknown to me, there are steel (or maybe iron) weights in the lower bars of the blinds. I cut right through the first and at that point, figuring I couldn't harm the blade any more, I cut the other blind too. I checked the blade afterward and found two or three chipped teeth and kept using it for some time afterward until having it repaired/sharpened by Forrest. -- Bodger's Dictum: Artifical intelligence can never overcome natural stupidity. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Metal Cutting Circular Saw Blades | Metalworking | |||
metal cutting circular saw blades | Metalworking | |||
Cutting steel w/ a circular saw.... Cutting Aluminum Stock | Metalworking | |||
anyone used diamond tipped blades in circular saw for cutting of soft aluminum extrusions ? | Metalworking | |||
Steel cutting circular saw blades ( HF ) | Metalworking |