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Thread: Gramercy Bow Saw

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Fort Worth, TX
    Posts
    51

    Gramercy Bow Saw

    For the past year, I've been lusting after a Gramercy bow saw. But it's $150, and the coping saw works just fine. I got one in the mail today. OMG, why have you fine folks not told me about this thing? It's only $150. I can now cut curves. Big curves, little curves, one day maybe even a straight line. All without having to turn on the dust collector that ShopCat hates.
    The trick to being good with a plane is being bad with a saw.

  2. #2
    Joe,

    It is about the same price as that space age fret/coping saw. As I expect you are finding out, unlike that space age one, it is worth the money. Welcome to the club.

    ken

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jan 2005
    Location
    Milton, GA
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    Now all you need is the WoodJoy 400mm( 15.7") bowsaw. With 3/8" jigging and wide Universal Turbo Cut blades you can handle about anything, short of long rips. At $140 it may even be a better investment than the Gramercy bowsaw. If you spring for an extra $20 you can get the 600mm saw. You can get cross-Cut, Rip-Cut & Universal blades for the big boy.

  4. #4
    I went to the Gramercy store "tools for working wood" in Brooklyn NY years ago and purchased the hardware kit to make one of their bowsaws. Perhaps I should get on that.

  5. #5
    Thanks to Chris Griggs for getting me to do the same. We ordered two kits and made one for us each. It is indeed a great cutting saw.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2013
    Location
    Princeton, NJ
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    The Woodjoy one is definitely for larger work. I tend to use it for wasting large joinery work with the thinner blade.
    Bumbling forward into the unknown.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Dickinson, Texas
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    I bought the kit and built my own bow saw.

    It's a fun project.

  8. #8
    Quote Originally Posted by lowell holmes View Post
    I bought the kit and built my own bow saw.

    It's a fun project.
    What kind of wood did you use Lowell?

  9. #9
    I made an arm to replace a split arm (TFWW had already replaced one at no charge ), I made the replacement arm out of Pecan/Hickory and even with my ham hands it has worked very well.

    ken

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Dickinson, Texas
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    Quote Originally Posted by Frederick Skelly View Post
    What kind of wood did you use Lowell?
    I made it out of curly maple. It looked good, but one of the arms broke.

    I plan on building another frame for it out of quarter sawn oak. It should be strong wood rather than pretty.
    Bowling alley maple would probably be good.

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jul 2013
    Location
    NE Ohio
    Posts
    1,029
    I'm planning to make a simple frame saw sometime this winter. I figure it will be good practice toward eventually making a turning (bow) saw. I'll use red oak for the frame saw. It's strong and I can make the saw from scraps.

    I'm really looking forward to making the turning saw. It will be the more useful of the 2 and probably prettier too
    -- Dan Rode

    "We are what we repeatedly do. Excellence, then, is not an act, but a habit." - Aristotle

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Twin Cities, Minnesota
    Posts
    274
    For those interested Paul Sellars has a two-part video on making a frame saw (bow saw)that he just added to YouTube. I think you need to be a registered member of his Masterclasses web site to see part 2 although not necessarily a paying member. You can search YouTube for "Paul Sellars frame saw" to find it and then get on his web site for part 2.

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