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Band saw problem - any suggestions please?

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ashnook

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Jan 2, 2006, 10:48:17 AM1/2/06
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I have a Rexon 10" band saw (1996, BS-10R) which has always had the
following problem but I decided to re-set it up and try to solve it,
currently to no avail.

When I cut a piece of wood, say thin ply (but anything really) the cut
'wanders' to the left as you look at the blade. I use the cutting guide and
hold the wood very tightly and the blade forces itself to the left giving a
less than 90 degree curved cut. If the wood is thick and I keep a tight hold
the pushing of the blade to the left will eventually stall the motor. I
still have the instructions and again today followed them to the letter but
still the problem persists.

Anyone seen this problem with a band saw and know how to solve it?

Is this common with band saws?

Thanks.
--
brian
---------------------------------------------------------------
http://stores.ebay.co.uk/Ashnook-Plants
www.ashnookplants.co.uk
Quality & Value


bi...@beeb.net

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Jan 2, 2006, 11:51:51 AM1/2/06
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On Mon, 2 Jan 2006 15:48:17 -0000, "ashnook"
<br...@at.ashnookdotfreeserve> wrote:

>I have a Rexon 10" band saw (1996, BS-10R) which has always had the
>following problem but I decided to re-set it up and try to solve it,
>currently to no avail.
>
>When I cut a piece of wood, say thin ply (but anything really) the cut
>'wanders' to the left as you look at the blade. I use the cutting guide and
>hold the wood very tightly and the blade forces itself to the left giving a
>less than 90 degree curved cut. If the wood is thick and I keep a tight hold
>the pushing of the blade to the left will eventually stall the motor. I
>still have the instructions and again today followed them to the letter but
>still the problem persists.
>
>Anyone seen this problem with a band saw and know how to solve it?
>

Got this problem with mine at the moment.

Cause: my own stupidty in letting something unsuitable contact the
teeth while cutting. Result blunt / wrongly set teeth on one side of
the blade.

Solution: new blade.

Bill

ashnook

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Jan 2, 2006, 12:06:57 PM1/2/06
to
Ah! Will try that. Perhaps it's bin my fault all the time! What did you do
to blunt the blade?

--
brian
---------------------------------------------------------------
http://stores.ebay.co.uk/Ashnook-Plants
www.ashnookplants.co.uk
Quality & Value

<bi...@beeb.net> wrote in message
news:43b95938...@news-europe.giganews.com...

Grumpy owd man

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Jan 2, 2006, 12:52:59 PM1/2/06
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Same problem with mine, years ago. Tried everything [almost] I'd cut
some ali sheet on it [too idle to move some gear to get at my metal
cutting bandsaw]...result? 1 totally bolloxed blade. Then to cap it
all I could not get replacements and had to have some specially made in
Sheffield. Expensive lesson, but, I found a good source of cheap blades
of every description possible and did a bulk purchase. In desperation I
even considerd machining some new guides for the blade, then a Fitter
put me straight!!


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Richard A Downing

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Jan 2, 2006, 1:06:14 PM1/2/06
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On Mon, 2 Jan 2006 15:48:17 -0000
"ashnook" <br...@at.ashnookdotfreeserve> wrote:

> I have a Rexon 10" band saw (1996, BS-10R) which has always had the
> following problem but I decided to re-set it up and try to solve it,
> currently to no avail.
>
> When I cut a piece of wood, say thin ply (but anything really) the
> cut 'wanders' to the left as you look at the blade. I use the cutting
> guide and hold the wood very tightly and the blade forces itself to
> the left giving a less than 90 degree curved cut. If the wood is
> thick and I keep a tight hold the pushing of the blade to the left
> will eventually stall the motor. I still have the instructions and
> again today followed them to the letter but still the problem
> persists.
>
> Anyone seen this problem with a band saw and know how to solve it?
>
> Is this common with band saws?

Almost all bandsaw problems are caused by one of two things, with the
first being the most frequent:

1) A bad blade. A good bandsaw blade, I'd recommend a 6 TPI SKIP blade
and 1/4 or 3/8 inch for a beginner, has the teeth set evenly left and
right. Almost all new bandsaws used to be shipped with a crap blade,
and all craftsmen knew what to do with them - this even for good
makes. Buy yourself a good blade.

2) Tension Adjustment. There are a lot of adjustments on a bandsaw, but
the most important to get right is the blade tension - it needs to be
tighter than you think. And to save the blade, and the tyres on the
wheels, release the tenson when you're done.

The other adjustments only really matter in a rough sort of way if
these two are wrong. Anyone who can use a bandsaw can get the guides
set 'good enough'.

R.

ashnook

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Jan 2, 2006, 1:27:49 PM1/2/06
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Just ordered some new blades from screwfix... thanks for the pointers

--
brian
---------------------------------------------------------------
http://stores.ebay.co.uk/Ashnook-Plants
www.ashnookplants.co.uk
Quality & Value

<bi...@beeb.net> wrote in message
news:43b95938...@news-europe.giganews.com...

Chris Bacon

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Jan 2, 2006, 3:06:17 PM1/2/06
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ashnook wrote:
> When I cut a piece of wood, say thin ply (but anything really) the cut
> 'wanders' to the left as you look at the blade.

You've touched the blade with something hard on one side,
or it was poorly sharpened in the first place.

ashnook

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Jan 6, 2006, 3:02:40 AM1/6/06
to
Thanks all. The new blade solved the problem. Now thrown away all the old
ones.

--
brian
---------------------------------------------------------------
http://stores.ebay.co.uk/Ashnook-Plants
www.ashnookplants.co.uk
Quality & Value

"ashnook" <br...@at.ashnookdotfreeserve> wrote in message
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