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Plate/Sheet Squaring Shears

Nor'Easter

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 30, 2012
Messages
718
Location
Maine
Doing an increasing amount of sheetmetal work as part of restorations, looking to pick up a 48" shear. If I'm going to drop $1500-2000 on a 16g foot stomp Tennsmith, I figure I might as well increase budget and get a small squaring shear. Local CL has a Niagara No. 64 which does full width 3/16" at what I could call a reasonable price.

Is there any reason I can't roll with a bigger shear, even when working with 18g? Sure would increase my capabilities.
 
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lis2323

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 25, 2016
Messages
3,234
Go with the Niagara if you can afford it. Unless you're a REAL big guy you may need to get airborne stomping full width 16ga with that Tennsmith.
 

matt_i

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 14, 2008
Messages
10,730
Location
SE Michigan
In my shop is a 48" Betenbender, which is a hydraulic shear that will knock off 1/4" thickness.

So more capacity is always better !!

But, some tradeoffs, the gap/clearance between the cleaving planes needs to be set a little less for thicker material, which will cause "wiping" or bend-over of the sheared edge on thin materials like trim coil (etc).

Blade condition is going to be very important in a used shear. Some have flipover blades which have 2 potential edges, some even have 4 potential edges. But its costly to sharpen them, I haven't gone that road yet but need to someday...

Usual, look out for repaired castings, make sure the hold-downs work properly. Take some 3/16" material to shear...even if its only 2" wide.

And lastly there are always fearsome flywheel-based mechanical shears out there. Those are scary because once the clutch-tooth is tripped, the thing is going to cycle no matter what. With a hydraulic machine if you don't like what you are seeing you stop the process right there.

Shears seem to go exponentially in weight as capacity goes up, so study your rigging and transport capabilities too.

Aside - I had a 36" Tennsmith earlier in life and loved it for the clean fast cuts. I thought I could cover all bases with the bigger machine but due to the blade clearance issues I wish I still had the small T-smith due to its fast clean cuts.
 
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