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#11
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Since most builders only need to cut a batch of sheet steel occasionally,
why not try a water jet cutting service. A friend here in Perth was rebuilding a car and had a new steel firewall made up from a CAD drawing at very reasonable cost. There are plenty of service providers in the USA - have a look at http://www.precisioncuttingservice.com/ in Savanna GA for example. One local company here in Perth has done many instrument panels out of sheet aluminum. Phil Maley Perth Australia |
#12
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One of the easiest ways to cut sheet 4130 is with a band saw. Use an
old metal cutting blade installed upside down (the teeth pointing up). Run the saw at normal speed and feed in the material. Keep the pressure up and it will go (melt) through like you are cutting butter. Don't pause though, it is not so easy to get started again. Some have also used the back side of the blade for this purpose with success. O-ring Seals --------------------------------------------------- Dear O-ring (and the Group), I believe you'll find there's a bit more to it than that :-) First off, the 'normal speed' you're referring to is for a woodworking bandsaw. The down-side is that most woodworking bandsaws are fitted with a rubber 'tire' on their driver- & idler-wheels. Friction cutting steel (which is what you're doing) will destroy the tire on the driver-wheel in short order. Bandsaw tires are moderately expensive and can be hellishly difficult to replace on some saws. Metal-cutting bandsaws do not use tires. The wheels are sizes so that the teeth overhang the edge of the wheel, not only for cooling but for clearing the swarf. You can set-up a metal cutting bandsaw for friction cutting if you have the proper ratio pulleys (ie, increase the blade speed). The popularity of this method hinged largely on the builder's ability to splice their own blades because the original idea was to use common steel strapping. Operated at high speed -- and cutting relatively thin stock -- the stuff does in fact cut like butter, with a very attractive displace of sparks, too :-) But the strapping was rapidly consumed and unless you were a dab hand at splicing, ideally with a Do-All type butt-welder, there was no long-term advantage over regular cutting. All of this came about due to the difficulty of cutting relatively hard steel in thinner gauges, which loves to strip the teeth off anything. .035 4130, you can do pretty well using a regular bi-metallic 32T blade by simply rigging the work to feed 'downhill' so that two teeth are in contact with the work. I've responded to your message because it appeared to be addressed to me, even though I was not the person who posted the original question. Someone else has already offered the most practical solution, which is to track down a stomp-shear and just whack those puppies out. But the fellow posting the question implied he not only wanted to make the part but that he wanted to acquire the tool, learn to use it, and make the parts himself. In that light I thought telling him to buy a shear might be a bit much :-) ...but did mention several other methods & tools for producing the parts. I think I even mentioned bandsawing but I assumed he would know I meant with a metal-cutting bandsaw. Friction cutting is kind of fun but if your only means of splicing a blade is to taper the piece and use hard solder, I think you'll find you can't use strapping. Too thin; the splice fails due to the heat. And if you can't use strapping I don't see much sense in ruining a good blade, unless you're trying to cut 6xxx stock or a leaf spring or something like that and friction cutting is your only option. Personally, I'd just whip out my phasor, give them Klingons hell :-) -R.S.Hoover |
#13
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Jimmy Galvin wrote:
Save yourself a lot of aggravation. Do not buy anything from "Harbor Fright". All they sell is junk and it never works like they say. You would have a lot more fun throwing the money in your toilet and watching it swirl around as you flush. Harbor Freight has a $35 cutting tool that can handle the job according to the advertised specs. It sorta, kinda looks like an angle grinder, except that it has a short arm and a reciprocating tooth out one side. I figure I can drill a 3/8" hole, clamp a 2x4 to each side of the sheet as guides, and just make a run with the cutter. Anyone have experience with these things? Do they leave a clean edge? That does sound like a good time, but the HF tools will have to do for me. I know they're junk for the most part. I also know that they're cheap. When the most likely failure mode is, "It rusted into a single solid mass", then it's hard to justify spending what it cost for professional grade tools. I count on the HF tools not falling apart until I'm done with the few times I need it. -- http://www.ernest.isa-geek.org/ "Ignorance is mankinds normal state, alleviated by information and experience." Veeduber |
#14
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"Ernest Christley" wrote in message
om... Harbor Freight has a $35 cutting tool that can handle the job according to the advertised specs. It sorta, kinda looks like an angle grinder, except that it has a short arm and a reciprocating tooth out one side. I figure I can drill a 3/8" hole, clamp a 2x4 to each side of the sheet as guides, and just make a run with the cutter. Anyone have experience with these things? Do they leave a clean edge? That does sound like a good time, but the HF tools will have to do for me. I know they're junk for the most part. I also know that they're cheap. When the most likely failure mode is, "It rusted into a single solid mass", then it's hard to justify spending what it cost for professional grade tools. I count on the HF tools not falling apart until I'm done with the few times I need it. I stopped by the HF tool retail outlet in Tacoma today to buy a set of five jeweler's loupe's (2x, 3x, 5x, 7x, & 10x) for $2.99. Noticed they had the electric shear tool on sale for $29.99. Rich S. |
#15
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Regarding HF tools:
Cheap goods will always drive quality goods out of the market place, a fact pointed out by Adam Smith more than 200 years ago. Once the quality goods have been driven out, the price of the cheap goods will then rise to the point where you will be paying high prices for junk. The number of everyday examples that illustrate this point are too numerous to mention but some examples all should appreciate are clothing, light bulbs and automobiles. In a dollar-oriented society there appears to be no easy solution for this economic fact of life. -R.S.Hoover |
#16
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![]() Regarding HF tools: Cheap goods will always drive quality goods out of the market place, a fact pointed out by Adam Smith more than 200 years ago. Once the quality goods have been driven out, the price of the cheap goods will then rise to the point where you will be paying high prices for junk. The number of everyday examples that illustrate this point are too numerous to mention but some examples all should appreciate are clothing, light bulbs and automobiles. In a dollar-oriented society there appears to be no easy solution for this economic fact of life. -R.S.Hoover ++++++++++++++++++++ Having a 'down' day? If I understand you correctly... today's cars are junk as compared to decades ago? Crummy brakes, steering, handling and lousey gas mileage is what I remember from those 'good old days'. Ditto for early washing machines, tube TV's, ad nauseum. The only thing that sticks with me about Adam Smith is that he's dead and dead right about self interest as the "invisible hand" that guides the most efficient use of resources as a consequence of economic freedom. What that means to me in plain english is -- I buy some junk... and lotsa' good stuff. I have faith in the 'common' man and his choices in a free market system over the long haul. YMMV. Barnyard BOb - practitioner of self interest |
#17
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#18
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snipped
Operated at high speed -- and cutting relatively thin stock -- the stuff does in fact cut like butter, with a very attractive displace of sparks, too :-) snipped As a Tool&Die shop owner for many years, I have friction-sawed a lot of different materials and it is the only way to go when cutting stainless steel. Your post was excellent and I would like to add one thing; ASAP Aircraft Co., years ago, had some small, flat parts laser cut. Later, the edges of the parts began showing small cracks caused by the intense heat of the laser and they stopped using that method of cutting. Friction sawing also produces heat. In fact, it melts the material. I dont know if this would be a problem or not but I think I would normalize the parts. Just to be on the safe side. Warren |
#19
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For lists of waterjet job shops in the USA or International visit the
following link: http://www.waterjets.org/waterjet_jobshops.html http://www.waterjets.org/internation..._jobshops.html Or, call OMAX Corporation to ask for specific shops in your area: http://www.omax.com (or 253 872 2300 or 800 838 0343) - Carl "Phil" philatwotechdotcomdotau wrote in message ... Since most builders only need to cut a batch of sheet steel occasionally, why not try a water jet cutting service. A friend here in Perth was rebuilding a car and had a new steel firewall made up from a CAD drawing at very reasonable cost. There are plenty of service providers in the USA - have a look at http://www.precisioncuttingservice.com/ in Savanna GA for example. One local company here in Perth has done many instrument panels out of sheet aluminum. Phil Maley Perth Australia |
#20
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