Strouty
Well-known member
Anyone know if they make a flat blade for hacksaws? All of the blades that I am finding are wavy and it messes up the material I am cutting.
Does the cable manufacturer sell a tool?
Grind the waviness off the blade. Enough of the teeth will stay for sawing action. You can even put a slight bevel at the tooth. Just take your time and don't blue the steel; rag soaked with cold water close at hand helps. Leave blade in frame to keep it under tension. Made mine with a bench grinder, but I imagine an angle grinder would work if you could hold the frame from moving around. You could even do this to a reciprocating saw blade for a super fast cut. Try a couple different tooth pitches to see which one give the cleanest cut.
Great info Neophyte, I appreciate it and will be looking for some of the raker set blades. I have been using 32 TPI, but the wavy makes a mess. It is more like tearing through the copper versus cutting it.
Looks like the material just doesn't have the structural strength to resist the pressure required to make a cut. Maybe try an abrasive blade or rod.
What about using something like a Sawzall at a relatively high speed and very little pressure on the blade? I've never worked with coax that big (rarely work with anything bigger than LMR600) but it seems like it would be worth trying on a piece of scrap.
Most of the time these are in a tight area and you do not have the space to use a tool that big. Sawzalls can also damage other cables as well, they tend to be bundled together so to speak. The only time you could easily use a bandsaw is on the end that is being pulled off the spool, but even then it can be cumbersome to use the saw with one hand and try and make an accurate cut.