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Welcome Find - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Welcome Find (/showthread.php?tid=7350432) Pages:
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RE: Welcome Find - DonSlaughter - 10-10-2019 Here it is again going through hard maple like a hot knife through butter! It was pulling to the right just slightly but a quick swipe with the diamond stone and it splits the line! ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() RE: Welcome Find - Admiral - 10-10-2019 (09-29-2019, 05:55 PM)DonSlaughter Wrote: I don't know if you've ever used Evapo-Rust but I've had fantastic results cleaning saw plates with it. I'm hesitant about evaporust as a while back I read some technical piece about high carbon saw plates and chelation that was not positive, so I remain wary. Saw plates are relatively thin, and if vintage, have been hammer tensioned, so I'd rather not risk messing any of that up. I scrape with a razor, and use sandpaper/steel wool/scotchbrite with Windex as a lube; cleaning a plate really doesn't take all that long. I don't know of any sawsmith who restores and sharpens saws who uses chemical means to clean the plate; maybe one might speak up here on this as I'd like to hear their opinions on this. RE: Welcome Find - bandit571 - 10-10-2019 Sometimes, I'll use Simple Green ( full strength) and a wide,old chisel....to scrape away the worst of the rust/crud. Turtle Wax makes a polishing compound ( 2 actually) that can then polish a saw plate quite well....use a green (3M) Scatchy Pad to scrub with first....then, buff things out with a few clean rags... [attachment=21108] Compared to... [attachment=21109] Worse of the crud was soaked in PBBlaster, THEN scraped down...before the green pad was used ( even attached the pad to a palm sander, and LIGHTLY pressing down) [attachment=21110] YMMV... RE: Welcome Find - DonSlaughter - 10-10-2019 (10-10-2019, 10:43 AM)Admiral Wrote: I'm hesitant about evaporust as a while back I read some technical piece about high carbon saw plates and chelation that was not positive, so I remain wary. Saw plates are relatively thin, and if vintage, have been hammer tensioned, so I'd rather not risk messing any of that up. I scrape with a razor, and use sandpaper/steel wool/scotchbrite with Windex as a lube; cleaning a plate really doesn't take all that long. Thanks for chiming in, Admiral. I did not know...never heard of the chelation factor. As I said, I've used it extensively on all kinds of tools....sure hope I haven't ruined any of them. I, probably, have a dozen or more saws I've use it on and they haven't presented any problems...is there any way I could investigate to see if the chelation has negatively affected them?. I don't mind using the elbow grease to clean up the saw plate but, when I discovered how effectively this non toxic chemical worked...it just made sense to do it. I was introduced to it by someone on one of the forums and was told to always rinse thoroughly and lubricate the plate immediately. I use tallow and always clean & lube after use as well. |