resawing - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: resawing (/showthread.php?tid=7331999) |
resawing - artj - 07-25-2017 I have a 14" Laguna bandsaw that I purchased a couple of months ago. Today I tried resawing some 8" wide x 7' long oak boards. They were about 2 inches thick and I wanted to resaw them to 1 and 1/4 inches. I am using a 3/4 inch blade, 4 teeth/inch. It took considerable effort to push these boards through the saw and as the motor got hot, it repeatedly threw the circuit breaker in my fuse box. Is this normal? If not, what am I doing wrong? Thanks RE: resawing - JGrout - 07-25-2017 (07-25-2017, 09:04 PM)artj Wrote: I have a 14" Laguna bandsaw that I purchased a couple of months ago. Today I tried resawing some 8" wide x 7' long oak boards. They were about 2 inches thick and I wanted to resaw them to 1 and 1/4 inches. I am using a 3/4 inch blade, 4 teeth/inch. It took considerable effort to push these boards through the saw and as the motor got hot, it repeatedly threw the circuit breaker in my fuse box. Is this normal? If not, what am I doing wrong? Thanks Teeth on the blade pointing downward? as in toward the table on the cutting side how old is the blade? 8" stock oak is not a super hard cut but it will be slower than turtle for feed if the blade is dull the breaker issue led me to the first question above those saws should still cut without throwing breakers Joe RE: resawing - artj - 07-25-2017 The blade is brand new. the circuit is 20 amp. RE: resawing - JGrout - 07-25-2017 (07-25-2017, 09:56 PM)artj Wrote: The blade is brand new. the circuit is 20 amp. What style tooth configuration? hook raker skip is it bimetal or carbon steel Also you did not answer all the questions above they are not meant for anything but helping IDC about the circuit unless saw is not rated for 20 amp your issue lays in the saw setup the motor getting hot is the first clue something is amiss you now know the breaker is doing it's job properly RE: resawing - mdhills - 07-26-2017 (07-25-2017, 09:11 PM)JGrout Wrote: Teeth on the blade pointing downward? as in toward the table on the cutting side Do check this; it's a possibility. When I was at a guy's shop to buy a parks planer, I was admiring his laguna bandsaw. And then I did a double-take. The blade was upside down (teeth facing up). I mentioned it to him, but I'm not 100% sure it registered. (and in the spirit of full confession, I've done this with a circular saw before -- this is really not good for carbide teeth, btw) Matt RE: resawing - BloomingtonMike - 07-26-2017 Which blade is it? I am betting tooth direction simple mistake. RE: resawing - artj - 07-26-2017 I purchased the blade from Woodcraft. It is a hook tooth blade. The blade cost about $30.00 so it is probably a bi-metal blade. I definitely have the blade teeth turned the correct direction, Thanks for your help. RE: resawing - JGrout - 07-26-2017 take the blade off turn on the saw. any odd noises scraping screeching rubbing any noticeable wear points inside the cavities? look closely spin the top wheel in the same manner looking for the same things RE: resawing - MichaelMouse - 07-26-2017 Any set in the teeth? Counts even when resawing cured wood. All it takes is a bit to help the dust clear instead of packing the teeth. Doesn't hurt to hand turn in reverse and wipe a bit of oil on the blade, either. RE: resawing - Philip1231 - 07-26-2017 I have a late model Laguna 14" BS and am using their carbide re-saw blade: like a hot knife through margarine. I assume you have tensioned the blade per the owners manual, and remembered to put the tension handle in the "tension" position when cutting? Don't ask me how I know about that potential mistake. |