Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 15 of 25

Thread: Resaw: Why, When, and how often?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    central PA
    Posts
    1,774

    Resaw: Why, When, and how often?

    A corellary title could be: Would you get a second BS or upgrade your TS?

    I think I should upgrade my table saw first, but I wonder how often I would need to/want to resaw. I have an older Craftman contractor and covet a nice cabinet saw, but I also really like the bigger bandsaws avaliable (like the 513 or 514 lines, nothing more $$). I have a G0555 now and it's fine except I can't resaw much with it, and I don't want to add a riser. I think I would want more saw for resawing, even though I know some of you do resaw with smaller(HP) saws.

    So the question really is:

    How often do you resaw, and for what purposes? I am pretty new at woodworking and have not had the "need" to resaw. I did resaw/bookmatch/glue up some drawer fronts from a 4" board, where I could have just resawn a wider board for the fronts, but that has so far been the only time. I guess I am looking for more instances where one benefits from resawing.
    (I am following the thread about smaller blades on a big saw, too, but if I got a bigger BS I would probably keep the smaller one for reasons given in that thread.)

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2004
    Location
    Lewiston, Idaho
    Posts
    28,566
    Rick,After my thread about my MM-16 and koa....I had my wife check my back for a bullseye.

    I had the opportunity to resaw for the first time Tuesday night. A coworker from 135 miles away is in the area helping with some installations and he is a guitar maker. He lives in an area with a much higher population than where I live and he couldn't find a commericial shop that had a bandsaw that would cut the 11" wide koa boards so he could bookmatch the back for a guitar he's building.It will depend on what kind of woodworking you are doing as to how often you resaw.

    I changed blades for the 1st time on my MM-16. It took me about 15 minutes to change and setup so I could resaw. I don't know that I'll ever need to purchase a 2nd saw. Some folks don't have the patience to spend time doing that or are more pressed for time.
    Ken

    So much to learn, so little time.....

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Trussville, AL
    Posts
    3,589
    I'm in the process of adding some upgrades specifically for resawing. As for how often, I guess it depends on how much money you have for buying wood and what kind of wood you work with. It kills me to plane a bunch of walnut into shavings. Even if the resawn part is less than a quarter of an inch thick, I could find something useful to do with it. If you were working with some expensive exotic, even more reason to make as much as you can usable. Also, if you often need thin stock, it seems to be unduly expensive. I can cut my own and avoid that premium+ price.

    If you buy your lumber already surfaced in the thicknesses you build with, then resawing tasks would probably be few and far between.

    But even if you never come up with a good reason to resaw, you'd have a big honking bandsaw in your shop. Just the thought makes me smile

  4. #4
    Rick, I think that's a really good question, and I'm eager to see the responses from more experienced folks.

    To me, it seems like a lot of folks get into woodworking using a table saw, buying pre-dimensioned lumber which they may or may not be planing to thickness, and not doing any resawing. They love that, decide they want to get more serious, and then decide they need a bandsaw. Serious woodworkers have bandsaws, simple as that, and buying big tools is big fun for most of us, right? Then they read the bandsaw posts on here, and most everyone encourages them to go bigger, so they end up with a 16 or 17 or bigger bandsaw.

    For many woodworkers, that works out great, because they end up doing a lot of resawing they couldn't have done (or done as well & conveniently) on a 14" saw.

    But I'll bet there are a lot of woodworkers out there who never really do evolve to a point where the added cost and size of a bigger bandsaw really made sense for them. For the most part, they still don't resaw very much, and they just use their big bandsaw for tasks (curve cuts and resawing under 6 or 12") that a 14"er would have done more or less as well.

    To me, that's what makes buying a first bandsaw so much harder than the other core tool purchases. You really need a crystal ball to tell you what kind of work you're going to be doing a couple years down the road.

  5. #5
    Resawing is IMHO best done for aesthetic reasons:

    - You have a great slab that you want to turn into bookmatched pieces
    - You have a great slab that you want to turn into veneer

    Resawing thick stock to create thinner stock just save $$ is not a good reason. The effort required, the waste lost, the twisting that can occur when tension is released...all of these make it worth it to just buy thinner stock.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Glenmoore, PA
    Posts
    2,194
    I find myself resawing for most projects these days. For panels and such (and whereever I can get away with it), I like to use shop-made veneer. I have a vac press setup and find that I cna make my stock go further and achieve some really nice bookmatches and such via resawing. As a concrete example, I am working on a cabinet for our bathroom and it has quite a few flat panels and an open shelving space where I wanted to use walnut (same as the rest of the cabinet). I made the face frame out of solid stock and veneered pretty much all the rest of it. I had a flawless 8/4 x 8' walnut board. I cross-cut it in half and it yielded 15 leaves of superb veneer per half. Would have cost a fortune to get that much clear walnut that wide for solid stock.

    Another benefit is that it is really, really FUN to make and press your own veneer.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    The Hartland of Michigan
    Posts
    7,628
    I resaw up to 12" all the time with my Delta 14" w/timberwolf 1/2" 3tpi blade. Even though it has 1hp it does fine if you don't push it too hard.
    No real reason not to put a riser in the Griz. Then you can get that cabinet TS you want so much.
    http://www.sawmillcreek.org/attachme...2&d=1238610606
    Last edited by Myk Rian; 09-10-2009 at 12:21 PM.
    Never, under any circumstances, consume a laxative and sleeping pill, on the same night

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Forest Grove, OR
    Posts
    1,167
    I resaw because I have a mid size collection of hardwoods that I salvaged from trees that were being cut down. I saved a few nice mature walnut, cherry, alder, and maple trees from becoming firewood. I could have gotten by with using my chain saw, table saw and a few hand tools to turn them into usable dimensions but I would have wasted at least half of the lumber in the kerf and chips. The band saw allows me to get reasonably large pieces out of a log with just the chain saw and a guide to rough cut down to 12" wide slabs.

    I have a 16" 2 hp Walker Turner saw I got from an estate sale for less than the cost of one of the better new 14" saws, and the Walker Turner is entirely cast iron and runs smooth as glass. The hard part is that it took me about a year to find an old iron saw that wasn't either overpriced, too big for my space, or completely ruined. I was very close to buying one of the 17" or 19" Grizzly saws. They are very nice for the money. If you need faster feed rates than you might go to a larger saw, but for the hobbyist a 16-19" saw with 2+ hp will get you into the fairly effortless category of resawing. I have used several 14" saws, and they are great for small projects like squaring up turning blanks and cutting out shapes, but I find the ones that I've tried a bit touchy and slow for resawing wide boards. I'd rather not risk blade deflection on a nice wide walnut slab, even if I didn't pay more than saw gas and a few hours labor for it.
    Last edited by Josiah Bartlett; 09-10-2009 at 1:00 PM.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    Western Nebraska
    Posts
    4,680
    Quote Originally Posted by Shawn Patel View Post
    Resawing is IMHO best done for aesthetic reasons:

    - You have a great slab that you want to turn into bookmatched pieces
    - You have a great slab that you want to turn into veneer

    Resawing thick stock to create thinner stock just save $$ is not a good reason. The effort required, the waste lost, the twisting that can occur when tension is released...all of these make it worth it to just buy thinner stock.

    Exactly. Think of drawer faces all from the same board, or matching bookmatched raised panel. I've even used it to match rail and stile parts. It's the easiest way to get grain to flow around a picture frame as well.

  10. #10
    I only resaw myself when:

    1) I have really rough wood and I want to get it reasonably straight/dimensioned so I don't have to do 10 passes on the jointer and planer

    2) I have a beautiful piece of wood that I want resawed to my standards and/or book matched

    3) I have some wood lying around that I want to use but it's not the right thickness

    Other than that, I'll just have my supplier resaw the boards when I buy them. They have a huge dedicated saw and a jig that gets it done in seconds. I have to change the blade, set everything up, set up my fence, worry about drift, etc etc. If I had a dedicated station, I'd probably resaw more.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Mar 2006
    Location
    SoCal
    Posts
    22,514
    Blog Entries
    1
    The combination of a jointer, planer and bandsaw really set me free as to what I could do in making parts for my projects. It is pretty standard for me to face joint, edge joint and then resaw a board. I use the flat outerfaces as reference surfaces to re-plane and create either my final thickness board or a prepared blank to repeat the resaw process. So for me it is primarily material preparation. I do take advantage of bookmatching as well and find that really contributes to the finished piece when that applies.
    "A hen is only an egg's way of making another egg".


    – Samuel Butler

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Jun 2008
    Location
    Lubbock Texas
    Posts
    931
    I have that GO555 with the riser and I resaw a LOT with it. Up to 12" stock. The resaw fence is a must though. I make smaller items and the thin wood is better for them.
    No PHD, but I have a DD 214

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Oct 2008
    Location
    Kapolei Hawaii
    Posts
    3,236
    IMO, I would get a bandsaw prior to a TS upgrade, not necessarily a re-saw band saw, but a "small" 14". That is what I have. I can resaw, and IMO, "saving" a felled tree and making some boards makes the BS worth getting. BUT, in addition to the BS, if you want to save logs from the woodpile, you'd need to get a good chainsaw and a chainsaw mill. The CSM is fairly cheap.

  14. I'd upgrade the saw

    If I were in your shoes, I'd upgrade the TS now before I upgraded or supplemented the bandsaw. (In fact, I did upgrade to a cabinet saw and haven't pulled the trigger on a bandsaw yet).

    I think you'd see an real improvement in the quality, safety, and enjoyability of your work with a cabinet saw. I don't see a bigger bandsaw having anything like that same impact for you at this point. It doesn't sound to me like the resawing limitation is really much of a limitation for you now, since you say you haven't had much need so far.

    Or think of it another way. Are there serious hobbyists who do very nice work who have only a 14" bandsaw like your 555 in the shop? Sure; my impression is its pretty common, even. And I think its a lot more common than serious folks doing nice work with only a contractor saw. Obviously everyone's mileage is going to vary, but I think the conventional wisdom would choose a cabinet saw + 14" bandsaw over a contractor saw + 17/19" bandsaw every time.

    One other thought: how big is your jointer? If its not bigger than 6", you may feel limited in your ability to take advantage of more resaw capacity than you have now.

    My 2 cents.

  15. he has a 14" saw already

    Quote Originally Posted by Kyle Iwamoto View Post
    IMO, I would get a bandsaw prior to a TS upgrade, not necessarily a re-saw band saw, but a "small" 14". That is what I have. I can resaw, and IMO, "saving" a felled tree and making some boards makes the BS worth getting. BUT, in addition to the BS, if you want to save logs from the woodpile, you'd need to get a good chainsaw and a chainsaw mill. The CSM is fairly cheap.
    He said he has a 555 already, a grizzly 14" bandsaw.

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •