- Joined
- Jan 27, 2005
- Messages
- 13,216
- Likes
- 5,832
- Location
- Dalworthington Gardens, TX
- Website
- pbase.com
Ring shake is fairly common in mesquite. Those of us who love to turn it watch for signs of ring shake and use various ways to stabilize it.
Would love to see picture of your table extension.Yes I use my minimax 16" at full depth often. For me it's just easier than the chainsaw. the only hard part is picking up the wood to that height. I put an extension table on my saw to make it easy to rip longer logs into turning blanks. I do support the log so it can't roll.
Odie, I think that is a fairly common part if you're talking about the cast aluminum-zinc alloy that adjusts the upper wheel tilt and tension. I bought a Delta clone about 35 years ago and that part broke when the saw was only 5 or 6 years old. The aftermarket replacement was much higher quality and is still in perfect shape.
My take on it - prepping blanks may likely be the hardest task put to such a bandsaw , so yeah I'd say you want the most feature rich and powerful saw you can manage.. pretty much any other woodworking work typically might be with resawing thick boards into thinner ones as the other top power consumer , but most of that is cutting in a straight line , as opposed to prepping log halves to round...Question...does someone need a 'great' band-saw if the primary task is for prepping blanks?
Need? Might get by with less for prepping some blanks. But one might consider the kind and size of blanks? Green wood, dry, cutting circles or arcs? Could get by with a bow saw, chain saw, or even an axe for some blanks.Question...does someone need a 'great' band-saw if the primary task is for prepping blanks?