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  1. #1
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    First time resawing....any advice?

    I am making my first go at resawing for a couple of boxes that I am going to make. I have not done this before and wanted to try and get a little insight/advice before doing so. I have a very small bandsaw, a Delta 28-150, which only has 4" of clearance. I have a piece of cocobolo and chechen that are 3" x 3/4" x 24", but am unsure which type of blade would produce the best results. Thank you in advance for any help.

  2. #2
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    You will get lots of input on your question, but in the simplest of terms you want a blade that has few teeth (probably 3 tpi), and lots of space for sawdust (gullets). You also want to use an easy feed. Forcing will not improve anything.

    If you Google re-sawing it will bring up lots of hits including many from here, and one of the most recent (3-5 days ago) Sawmill Creek topics came up with a good (UTube I think) video covering re-sawing.

  3. #3
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    Thank you Rich. I did a few practice cuts on some pine, but pine does not compare, at least the way I see it. it is so much softer. I have a hard time keeping a straight, uniform cut, but i was also using a blade with with many more tpi, so hopefully your advise will make much needed difference. do you have any suggestions on where would be a good place to look for a larger band saw, without having to purchase a new unit, which I cannot afford right now? I live in the midwest and resources are rather limited in my area(eastern iowa) and I have taken a liking to the finished products I have seen on this forum that are made with quartersawn wood. That being said, where does a guy without any "connections" locate quartersawn wood?

  4. #4
    Just my 2 cents (worth about 1 cent really......):

    On locating quartersawn oak, or any other wood: Try looking up WoodMizer owners. A lot of these guys do custom sawing and have some inventories on hand, or know where to find what you need, or will make what you need.

    On re-sawing: Fine tune your saw and have it running perfect. Then, as you feed material, "feel" the cut and only give what the saw can take and is ready for. Takes a little practice and some experience, but once you get it, it's super easy and super rewarding.

    Best.

  5. #5
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    Use a table saw if the stock is only 3" wide. You need a band saw blade with around 3 teeth per inch to resaw, and horsepower. You can get neither on a 9" bandsaw. You are not going to get much of a cut with any blade on that saw, and by the time you clean up the cut, you're going to be taking 1/8" out of the wood anyway. Nothing saved by using that bandsaw.

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Coers View Post
    Use a table saw if the stock is only 3" wide. You need a band saw blade with around 3 teeth per inch to resaw, and horsepower. You can get neither on a 9" bandsaw. You are not going to get much of a cut with any blade on that saw, and by the time you clean up the cut, you're going to be taking 1/8" out of the wood anyway. Nothing saved by using that bandsaw.
    I am with Richard on this. Use the table saw. If you have a thin kerf ripping blade, even better. You'll get a much cleaner cut.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by George Gyulatyan View Post
    I am with Richard on this. Use the table saw. If you have a thin kerf ripping blade, even better. You'll get a much cleaner cut.
    Don't cut through it with the TS, but get most of it, from both edges. Finish the cut with the BS.
    Never, under any circumstances, consume a laxative and sleeping pill, on the same night

  8. #8
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    I saw on mythbusters one of the guys attempting to "resaw" a board on a tablesaw, and the thing smoked like crazy...

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tai Fu View Post
    I saw on mythbusters one of the guys attempting to "resaw" a board on a tablesaw, and the thing smoked like crazy...
    I saw that also. They just weren't doing it right, as in much of their "testing".
    Never, under any circumstances, consume a laxative and sleeping pill, on the same night

  10. #10
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    Yea, "We got years of experience that keeps us safe" and they get hurt like every other episode...

  11. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by Tai Fu View Post
    I saw on mythbusters one of the guys attempting to "resaw" a board on a tablesaw, and the thing smoked like crazy...
    They were probably using the wrong sawblade, and likely an underpowered saw.

    I resaw on my tablesaw from time to time as I don't have a bandsaw with a Freud TK ripping blade and never have issues.. Good point by Myk Rian. Leave a little material in the middle so the pieces don't completely separate. This is more for safety so the cutoff doesn't collapse on the sawblade and kick back.

    As I don't have a bandsaw, I just finish the cut with a hand saw and then pass the piece through planer to clean it up.

  12. #12
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    To be fair, those guys are more actors than tradesmen, so they appear to know what they are doing but in fact aren't good at it. Not sure what "30 years of special effect experience" means.

  13. #13
    Other thing to note is that resawing 3/4 will not result in 3/8 final thickness. You'll end up likely with ~1/4" after surfacing. Is that thick enough for your boxes?

    If you had to do it on that saw, I'd use a 1/4" or 3/8", 3tpi blade.

  14. #14
    I haven't tried that particular saw, but I've used small saws like that. In my estimation, it would be hard to get it to cut strait. Maybe you could, but I sure would experiment on scrap first. Maybe some hardwood pallet material.

    Speaking of pallet material, a friend of mine has a whole collection of veneer from interesting looking pallet boards.

    Is there a woodworking club in your area? Or a woodcraft store? It seems to me that many people who have a nice saw that is capable of tensioning a blade would be more than happy to let you give it a try. You may need to put in a little effort to find them though.

  15. #15
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    Use the widest blade your saw can tension properly, with the fewest teeth available at that width. With a smaller bandsaw you are going to have to go slow... don't expect to plow through the stock. If it's a 10" saw you might try 3/8" 3TPI blades.

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