Right. Just use a small hammer to offset all the out-facing teeth to be flush with the body of the saw.Saw set!
If you whack the hole saw with a hammer and make it slightly oval, you can make the undersized one cut slightly larger.Right. Just use a small hammer to offset all the out-facing teeth to be flush with the body of the saw.
Next you’re going to be suggesting using a torque wrench as a breaker bar!If you whack the hole saw with a hammer and make it slightly oval, you can make the undersized one cut slightly larger.
I will admit its a bit of a rough method. But when the hole saw you have is cutting just too tight for what you need you do what you gotta to get the job done.Next you’re going to be suggesting using a torque wrench as a breaker bar!
How cheap? How fast? How flat?These have to be cheap and fast to install as well as flat as we stack them sometimes.
That's nice. I have a couple of circle jigs for my router but they don't go that small. Added that to my Amazon list.if you have access and space for router and jigs to cut your hole... the Jasper circle cutting Jig for routers will get you the exact dimension of any holes you need in 1/16 increments.


Instead of worrying about the hole size, why not just do something to simply increase the diameter of the plug? Wrap a layer or two of tape around it.One of my hobbies is beekeeping. I want to drill a hole in their roofs and use a paint plug to seal the hole when not in use. The plug requires a tight friction fit to keep water out.
50mm and it is too loose.
NOPE!!! It is what we do and I know in three years some poor soul will search google on how to modify a hole saw and find this thread and ten other ways to do it. Happens to me more often then you'd think. No need for AI when we got GJLooks good. I hope you won’t mind if we continue to solve your problem in increasingly more complex and expensive ways.
At about the 16:00 mark in the video it talks about the lids having holes drilled in them for the sugar water to drip from down into the hives and the size/number of the holesSyrup goes into the bucket, hole is capped, bucket upside down on top of the hive. How do the bees get to the syrup?
Bees are usually fed only at the beginning of the season. Once the plants start blooming the feeders are removed.Syrup goes into the bucket, hole is capped, bucket upside down on top of the hive. How do the bees get to the syrup?
Yes but that becomes a problem when you are 30 or 40 hives. You have to have all those extra boxes which is a waste of space so you get frames then you have to store those if you use the boxes. I built a 4'x36'x5' tall mezzanine in my garage and half of it is equipment. It all gets used at some point in the year but i'm moving toward the way the big guys do stuff. Every minute I can save moving stuff adds up fast.I just have an empty deep on top of my brood boxes for feeding. Keeps the syrup from freezing as well.
i got one of them, didnt know what it was, been in the toolbox about 35 yearsOk, you made me do it. I am revealing my secret to you. I inherited a bit like this from my carpenter dad years ago. They cut nice holes in wood.