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    Results 1 to 9 of 9
    1. #1
      Join Date
      Apr 2002
      Posts
      777
      Country Flag: United States

      Dry Cutting Metal Bandaws - Blade Life

      I'm thinking of getting a horizontal band saw. I expect that blades wear our quickly for the dry variety and that over the years, I'll go through enough blades to warrant the upgrade to one that uses coolant.

      Any comments?

      --JMarsa



    2. #2
      Join Date
      Apr 2006
      Posts
      1,027
      some of the better band saw do not recommend coolant, i have a horizontal, ellis and they hate coolant and no you won't go thru alot of blades as long as you buy the proper blade for the proper material, blade life highly hangs on you have the appropriate amount of teeth in the work peice.
      what brand are you looking at? ellis are made int he u.s and high quality but come with a price tag

    3. #3
      Join Date
      Apr 2002
      Posts
      777
      Country Flag: United States
      I've only used wet saws in real metal shops, this is for hobby use. I like the idea of the horizontal/vertical combo but I might be able to get away with a jigsaw, reciprocating, or plasma instead with a horizonal only. I hate having the wrong tool for the job.

      I'm debating between these:

      this wet

      and

      this dry

      Both are imports. I'm leaning towards the latter.

      --JMarsa

    4. #4
      Join Date
      Mar 2004
      Location
      Mid-Michigan
      Posts
      2,764
      Country Flag: United States
      For hobby use that saw will do fine. I have a 25 year old Tiawanese 4x6 horizontal that I use all the time with no blade issues. In fact, the current blade has been on there for a couple of years now. I cut everything with it, wood, aluminum and steel.
      I use bi-metal blades exclusively and these are purchased through Enco (usually on sale).
      Mark
      Mark:
      "Bad Ast" Astro Van. Just because I did it... Doesn't mean it's possible...
      This my Bad Ast thread...
      https://www.pro-touring.com/showthre...roject-Faze-II
      This is my Fotki album...
      http://astroracer.fotki.com/

    5. #5
      Join Date
      Nov 2008
      Posts
      42
      I have a Dake SE-712 and used the blade for over a year before finally changing it. It is a wet saw and I did a lot of cutting with it.

      But it is a little pricey when compared to the knock-off ones.

      http://www.southern-tool.com/store/m...nson-se712.jpg

    6. #6
      Join Date
      Apr 2002
      Posts
      777
      Country Flag: United States
      Nice. It's vertical as well. I wish you lived nearby!

      --JMarsa

    7. #7
      Join Date
      Apr 2006
      Posts
      1,027
      http://www.ellissaw.com/Band-Saws/12...mitre-band-saw
      these are about 2500 new made in usa

      theres mine, check ebay and buy a good used high quality one before buying a new import one, quality is incomparable, price is also but thats why i say buy used quality one
      Last edited by hotrdblder; 11-15-2008 at 05:40 PM.

    8. #8
      Join Date
      Apr 2001
      Location
      Rockford Illinois
      Posts
      3,949
      Country Flag: United States
      Check out Jet and Delta for brand names and last but not least check out good ole SEARS Craftsman. Remember that the Craftsman will help out the paycheck of a serving soldier.

      You can find all of these on line and see what the prices are and the capacities.

      Goodluck.

    9. #9
      Join Date
      Oct 2005
      Location
      Greenville, IN
      Posts
      1,072
      I use a jet. I have HAAS CnC's, but a saw, is a saw. Take care of them, never crash the blade down to hard, it will be fine. Mine is big and cost around 3500.00 I am sure the smaller ones are nice as well. I cut mainly A-2(Hard stuff), it never fails me, I love it. I was unsure at first. But I take care of it, nothing is worse than an old worn out saw.IMO.
      Kevin




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