Monday, October 30, 2023

A little better quality machine

 



7 comments:

  1. I was gifted an older Craftsman bandsaw and used for a few small things then I wanted to turn a branch from a tree into lumber and I learned that how tall a cut you can take is important. This one has a Cutting Capacity Height of 5".

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    Replies
    1. It's not the right band saw for cutting tree branches into lumber. Excellent observation.

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  2. Oh boy. Could I have been in trouble if I had sent last week's bandsaw to my soon-to-be daughter in law. I had missed the 'low cost' label in the header. ☹️☹️☹️
    I am glad I did not send a link to Wen. She's a 100 on a scale of one to ten.
    🤔🤔🤔😇😇😇🙂🙂

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  3. I have a roughly 10 year old Craftsman bandsaw that looks just like that. I always thought it must have been made by the same company. Just like Rob says, 5" cutting height.

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  4. Two blade speeds: fast enough for wood, and too slow for wood and way too fast for metal. 10" throat: to shallow to be useful. $500 bucks: about 5-10x the price of a used 12" Craftsman which has more capacity in every dimension and is otherwise identically featured. Find a used Craftsman 12 that some idjit is selling "because it's old" and save a bundle. If it's a King-Seeley Craftsman from the 50's, it's infinitely rebuildable for cheap and damn near indestructible. Pro tip: a real bandsaw needs to have a 14" throat, a 1 hp motor, and to cut metal needs to be in the 200 fpm range (wood needs 3000 fpm). Put a VFD on a used 3 phase Delta 14 or Taiwanese knock-off and have the best of all worlds.

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  5. Well, they called it Deluxe, which in advertising lingo means the same as 'premium', i.e. absolutely nothing.

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  6. Too bad the motor is a 56C and is mounted in the back of the lower wheel house. That makes the machine far less flexible than it would be with an outboard motor and V-belt, and it marries you to the manufacturer. I have a Grizzly 14" bandsaw built like that, and I'm very interested in getting rid of it so I can move an old Reliant bandsaw into its place in my shop (I have far too many machines).

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