Posts: 82
Threads: 0
Joined: Sep 2016
Location: NE Iowa
I'm using a 3/16 10TPI. Still cuts fairly quickly and I have less sanding to do.
Posts: 5,421
Threads: 0
Joined: Jun 2001
Location: Troy IL
I use a 3/16 14TPI Rake blade, for less sanding. I also have a washer for laying out an easy curve for the blade, on corners I don't want to cut any tighter. The easier you can cut a corner and keep the blade moving the better.
a 10tpi rake would be about the same but a little faster. The hardest part of BS boxes is the sanding. better have a spindle sander
Life is what you make of it, change your thinking, change your life!
Don's woodshop
Posts: 1,568
Threads: 0
Joined: Nov 2005
Location: Mid, MI.
Thanks guys for your recommendations and tips.
Posts: 5
Threads: 0
Joined: Oct 2017
I recently got into creating power saw boxes when obtaining the Ventura book concerning them Building stunning Boxes along with your Bandsaw. Her recommendation concerning blades reasonably flies within the face of standard power saw knowledge, however, she recommends a 3/16" ten tpi blade. i do not skills, however, it's worked well on behalf of me. The one i am exploitation is by Starrett, sold at Woodcraft, among alternative places.
I tried another blade, 3"16" 3/4 tpi, that worked fine apart from the lot of rougher cut, which suggests plenty a lot of sanding.
She claims in her book that you simply will use that very same ten tpi blade for the straight cuts (slicing off the rear and also the drawer sides), however, I did not attempt that. simply used a similar 1/2" three tpi blade that I take advantage of for resawing for those cuts.
Edit: Here's one out of canary wood that I finished recently.
Posts: 2,540
Threads: 0
Joined: Jul 2007
Location: Long Island, NY
You guys don't find that high of a tooth count loads up and overheats on such a thick block of wood?
Benny