I’ve been using the Grizzly G0555 14” bandsaw for about a decade now, and it’s just started doing something I’ve never encountered. A little background - I seldom use this saw to round blanks, preferring to just knock the corners off with the chainsaw and go directly to the lathe with blanks. I do use it to prep the quarter—sawn wood from cutting out the pith when process I get rounds. Once in a while it’s used to resaw these pieces or prep spindle blanks.
Today I was getting ready to process some wood brought home from a recent road trip when the blade broke at the weld. No problem, change out the blade (a slightly used blade was handy), adjust the guide and thrust bearings and get back to work. But now when cross cutting a piece of black acacia I noticed a loud noise best described as a chatter when cross cutting. The exit side of the cut showed chipping along both sides of the kerf edge That I’ve never seen, and feeding stock into the blade was more difficult than I’ve found usually. The weird thing is that ripping seems perfectly normal.
I decided to change to a new, unused blade and see what happened. After checking all guides, tracking, tension the result is the same. Thought it may be the acacia (it’s notoriously strong and brittle by nature) so I tried some cherry I had sitting around - again, strange sound on cross-cutting, torn out along the exit side of the cut line, but perfectly normal when ripping the same stock.
Any ideas? The only thing I haven’t changed is the throat plate - it’s one of the plastic ones, I have a few new ones sitting around…and the one that’s on there could be much tighter to the blade…
Today I was getting ready to process some wood brought home from a recent road trip when the blade broke at the weld. No problem, change out the blade (a slightly used blade was handy), adjust the guide and thrust bearings and get back to work. But now when cross cutting a piece of black acacia I noticed a loud noise best described as a chatter when cross cutting. The exit side of the cut showed chipping along both sides of the kerf edge That I’ve never seen, and feeding stock into the blade was more difficult than I’ve found usually. The weird thing is that ripping seems perfectly normal.
I decided to change to a new, unused blade and see what happened. After checking all guides, tracking, tension the result is the same. Thought it may be the acacia (it’s notoriously strong and brittle by nature) so I tried some cherry I had sitting around - again, strange sound on cross-cutting, torn out along the exit side of the cut line, but perfectly normal when ripping the same stock.
Any ideas? The only thing I haven’t changed is the throat plate - it’s one of the plastic ones, I have a few new ones sitting around…and the one that’s on there could be much tighter to the blade…