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A GOOD Metal Chop Saw

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Little Wing, Mar 15, 2009.

  1. Little Wing
    Joined: Nov 25, 2005
    Posts: 7,565

    Little Wing
    Member
    from Northeast

    Looking for advise and experience here..Need to get a good ( compound? ) metal chop saw. Something very good for angles that need to be on. I see the basic close enough ones.. Can anyone recommend a good one fro doing tube frame work. Will be cutting up to 3 " od Tubing
     
  2. lowsquire
    Joined: Feb 21, 2002
    Posts: 2,567

    lowsquire
    Member
    from Austin, TX

    what you need is a cold cut drop saw, they have a solid,toothed , blade, spin pretty slow and use coolant. they are accurate to less than 1/2mm when set up properly, and are ususally used in production steel shops. the downside is they cost about 2 thousand bucks. I want one bad.
    http://www.brobo.com.au/coldsaws.html
     
  3. Little Wing
    Joined: Nov 25, 2005
    Posts: 7,565

    Little Wing
    Member
    from Northeast

    ok so one of those carbon composite blade saws in not the right route ?
     
  4. budd
    Joined: Oct 31, 2006
    Posts: 3,478

    budd
    Member

    i have two chop saws, both milwaukees, one is an abrasive and the other a dry cut saw, i cant depend on either to cut an exact angle based on there settings, of all the metal saws i have used only a cold saw was able to cut the angle it was set to, but your looking at $2000 for a used one.
     
  5. fuel
    Joined: May 14, 2008
    Posts: 218

    fuel
    Member

    We had a cold saw in a shop that I used to work in. No one that worked there was very impressed with it at all. I certainly wasn't. Most of our work was with stainless steel. We cut alot of angles and we'd wear out the saw blades. We tried lots of different saw blades that were specifically for stainless and was careful on not feeding it too fast. They still wouldn't last very long. BTW, it was brand new. It was such a POS that the owner made the company take it back. It was a KMT or Kalamazoo, I think.

    Unless I have no other choice, I don't use an abrasive cut off saw either. They are pretty inaccurate for any kind of precision fit up.

    Our horizontal bandsaw was faster and made a better cut, more accurate cut. A GOOD horizontal bandsaw is one of the handiest tools you can ever have. Make sure to get one with a mitering head if you can. They are expensive but well worth the $. Buy good blades and they will last a long time as long as you have don't have a numbskull using it.

    Just my opinion...
     
  6. Streetwerkz
    Joined: Oct 1, 2008
    Posts: 718

    Streetwerkz
    Member

    I have a Scotchman cold saw, very accurate, clean cuts
    I can cut a .250 2x4 in under 30 sec with a mill quality finish.
    I love it, one of the best investments we ever made, far out performs the band saw cuts we use to outsource.
     
  7. Little Wing
    Joined: Nov 25, 2005
    Posts: 7,565

    Little Wing
    Member
    from Northeast

    Could I use a tile cutting saw with a metal blade?
     
  8. roughidle
    Joined: Feb 1, 2009
    Posts: 549

    roughidle
    BANNED
    from iowa

    One thing I have learned about chop saws is to take my time making a cut the matters bacause the harder you push the blade through the more it flex's.
     
  9. Degreaser
    Joined: Nov 9, 2006
    Posts: 935

    Degreaser
    Member

    Compare the rpm's of each.
     
  10. InDaShop
    Joined: Aug 15, 2004
    Posts: 2,796

    InDaShop
    Member
    from Houston

    I use a Milwaukee Port-a-band for all tube cutting and fitting now. I do all my copes with it as well.

    I used a hot chop saw and its loud, and makes a fuggin mess. Port-a-band makes clean precise cuts, is quite, and the mess is confined to directly below the cut.

    Just lock the tube in the vice, make you marks with a sharpee and cut. Maybe use a flapdisc to bevel the edges for penetration.
     
  11. oldandkrusty
    Joined: Oct 8, 2002
    Posts: 2,141

    oldandkrusty
    Member

    Amen to that! I saw and used this saw at last year's SEMA show and was VERY impressed with the accuracy of the cuts. There is very little heat created during the cut, generally making it possible to touch the part being cut!!! The saw blades, therefore, last quite a bit longer. It was a little pricey, but man did I want one for my shop!!!
     
  12. DLW
    Joined: Nov 2, 2005
    Posts: 197

    DLW
    Member

    i have a jet swivel head band saw, works great wasn't as much as a cold saw. the cold saws are great but usually expensive. I have seen pics of the metal blade chop saws coming apart and looked pretty scary.
     
  13. 392_hemi
    Joined: Jun 16, 2004
    Posts: 1,737

    392_hemi
    Member

  14. Little Wing
    Joined: Nov 25, 2005
    Posts: 7,565

    Little Wing
    Member
    from Northeast

    Very cool ,,was also looking at a porta band but did'nt think I could hold it steady for angled cuts
     

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