


Logan, in his Travis McGee series of mystery stories, John D. MacDonald wrote: "living near the beach was the only place to live in Florida." We live a mile from the beach and I would have to agree. Of course our eight decade old skin (exposed to the surface of the sun for 50 of those years) is subject to instant melanomas every time we leave the house in daylight.
Logan, the feature that matters with a toothed metal cutting saw is the speed of the blade. I put an abrasive blade on my 10" wood miter saw and cut some exhaust tubing. It produced a massive collection of 'burr' and enough sparks to force me to cut the tubing outside and even then I hung around for an hour to be sure a brush fire wouldn't spring up.
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I went back to my Portaband/SWAG setup but 90° cuts were lucky guesses.
I broke down and bought an Evolution 14" chop saw but the cheapest one they offered and made a really cheap stand. It fits under the shed workbench if I hold the blade guard down to its lowest position. Less planned, more dumb luck.
I bought it for $200.09 from Home Depot in 2018. It sells for $350 now on the Evolution site:
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Evolution R355CPS: Multi-Material Cutting Chop Saw With 14 in. BladeDefault Title
Faster, safer and more economical, the Evolution R355CPS Multi-Material Cutting Chop Saw With 14 in. Blade outperforms abrasive saws by 14 times! Order now!store.evolutionpowertools.com
As mentioned, the motor turns at only 1,450 rpm, unlike the standard miter saw that turns at 3,800 rpm.
Logan, I often wonder if its cutting, compared to the abrasive saw. It is slightly louder than my Portaband.
Logan, the sun has aligned with my ancient rock formation, indicating today is your birthday. Happy Birthday Logan!
Happy Birthday!
Happy Birthday Logan!
Happy Birthday my friend!!![]()
Happy Birthday!
The speed you’ve been working at lately is impressive!

While I haven't personally spent any time doing it, that certainly sounds like a piece that could be done in the slicer. Just primitive shapes right? A couple cylinders?Nice work on the table. I have a surgical table in my shop that needs a new pocket for a caster. I used some janky program and made one to 3d print. Dimensionally it was correct but there wasnt a hole for the caster to insert into. My computer is too old to run fusion and I hate asking to use my wifes laptop to make something plus its a macbook and foreign to me. Oh and I **** at fusion so its a difficult task snytime I try to model anything. I need to sit down and learn it so I can take advantage of our 3d printers capabilities.
Nice work on the table. I have a surgical table in my shop that needs a new pocket for a caster. I used some janky program and made one to 3d print. Dimensionally it was correct but there wasnt a hole for the caster to insert into. My computer is too old to run fusion and I hate asking to use my wifes laptop to make something plus its a macbook and foreign to me. Oh and I **** at fusion so its a difficult task snytime I try to model anything. I need to sit down and learn it so I can take advantage of our 3d printers capabilities.
While I haven't personally spent any time doing it, that certainly sounds like a piece that could be done in the slicer. Just primitive shapes right? A couple cylinders?






FANUC?had it shipped ground out of Chicago
FANUC?


Is that something you could get from Airgas? They have a store in Omaha: 10433 J St Omaha, NE 68127
In college I worked at a now defunct company down off 12th st in Omaha - Disbrow & Company. Big supplier of Anderson windows, pre-hung doors and custom millwork. I was allowed to take scraps and cut offs and would glue together and create slabs of walnut, maple, etc with their giant machinery and make cutting boards for people as gifts. I like your wood project, although the 2-tailed veggie shark design is a little freaky. Maybe for a PETA or Sierra Club member.![]()
Happy belated Bday Logan!
Table came out great.
Happy belated birthday!
Nice progress.
......behind on my reading.....Happy belated Birthday![]()

@jonshonda, I think I wanted to learn to weld the first time I saw someone do it (I was probably 10) but put it off until I was 63. It's so much fun just practicing that you'll start sticking broken stuff together and wonder how you lived without one. I won't predict you'll love it but a starter machine and accessories will set you back around $150. I started with a Harbor Freight machine for $80, a pair of welding gloves, two pound spool of wire and a helmet for another $60. The price has gone up but Amazon has the machine, wire and gloves for $107.Envious of your welding adventure. I've been wanting to learn how to weld and get all the required gear, but not really sure what I would be doing with the hobby long term past messing with stuff around the house. I know I would want to weld indoors in the winter, which means ventilation and all that. For now I will live my adventure through you!!
Nice. Last year I got a new Rossi RS-22 in 22LR with the threaded barrel. Still in the bag. Ready to go. Unused as yet.![]()





Serving boards.. missed that. Forget my recommendation, lol. You might need to play with air, speed, etc.
Carry on... nothing to see here, lol.
The cat one would fit well in my house, my orange cat doesn’t seem to like my wife much. But he will run up to me to be petted and cuddled when I come home. He will push my wife’s face away with his paw when my wife tries to cuddle with him.
@loganb that seems like a great purchase!....and just remember, with the right bit, and speed control, that is a great tool for aluminum as well as wood