1930artdeco
Well-known member
Can I use my band saw to cut PVC lengthwise? I figure I will go through a bunch of blades but it would be faster than using a hack saw. I also have a 3" cut off wheel saw than I can use.
Mike
Mike
Just have to make sure the guy stays in the middle. If the cut gets off to one side, it can get wonkyLike butter. Be careful though. Even cutting a cylinder lengthwise can make for some unpredictable behavior.
On a bandsaw, it's really not necessary. And PVC pipe isn't going to close up anyway.I suggest you use some-sort of a 'riving tool' to keep the cut open.
The problem with a vee block in this case is that it wants to force the kerf closed.I'm thinking a vee block made out of a 2x6,both ends and close up to the blade,it will keep the piece safely in alignment and from rolling and spiraling, the rivaling idea has my thinking cap on,and I might head out to my cold garage later.Aggressive tooth blade,slow feed,you don't want it to gum up.The rule of thumb on safety is round items whether on the band saw or table saw need to be in a vee of some kind.If you don't and the piece takes off,you can thank me later
And I wouldn't do it on a table saw, that is asking for trouble. A round object on a tool that needs it to be flat and stable, what could go wrong.
OP is asking if he can cut a piece of plastic pipe on a bandsaw. Not knocking OP - everybody was new once - but somebody asking that should probably not be trying to cut a round piece of stock on a tablesaw. I would also not say doing so is "completely safe". Nothing abotu a tablesaw is completely safe.If you know how to operate a table saw, cutting a slit in a round object is completely safe. Done it many times, never a problem.
Blade down, sitting in a corner all by itself is my safe method. Don't talk to it, don't make eye contact, and it Might Not bite you. No guarantee of that tho.Nothing abotu a tablesaw is completely safe.
I've had the bottom of the table hit me in the head before while I was working on the sawstop at the makerspace. I was trying to help it and it still assaulted me!Blade down, sitting in a corner all by itself is my safe method. Don't talk to it, don't make eye contact, and it Might Not bite you. No guarantee of that tho.
Even safer if you tuck the router table under it. Chain the two together so they can't sneak up on you when you least expect it.Blade down, sitting in a corner all by itself is my safe method. Don't talk to it, don't make eye contact, and it Might Not bite you. No guarantee of that tho.
Works for me,once you learn where and how much pressure to apply ,it can be done.Its like any other tecnique,you might not get it exactly right the first time.Hoping the OP reports back,not something you normally do on either bandsaw or tablesawThe problem with a vee block in this case is that it wants to force the kerf closed.
Maybe not something everybody does often, but I do regularly split steel tubing and pipe on the bandsaw. Correct in that it's not rocket science, but it can go awry. In PVC, not likely to result in loss of limb.Works for me,once you learn where and how much pressure to apply ,it can be done.Its like any other tecnique,you might not get it exactly right the first time.Hoping the OP reports back,not something you normally do on either bandsaw or tablesaw