Posted by Ian Thomson 2 on 12/09/2019 19:40:20:
It looks good!
Are you please with the accuracy of it?
I am expecting to take far more than 2 weeks with my build.
Hi Ian.
Yes, I am very happy with it. Cuts straight in stoke as well as vertically. However, that was achieved by having good adjustment capability in the saw frame – the frame is all bolted construction, so that the forward and rear vertical struts can be adjusted in vertical angle, independently , allowing the blade to track perpendicularly to the saw vice, and in a vertical manner. The entire saw can also rotate a few degrees clock/anti-clock on the base to ensure a square cut as well. Welding up the blade frame would imply putting the adjustment mechanism in some other part of the machine somehow.
The Myfordboy saw has a very short stroke, which is ok when cutting large material, occupying a large length of the blade all the time. I have two crank pin position that are easily changed – 15 seconds or so – that give a mid length and a full length stroke – the mid length caters for material up to 80mm diameter, the full lenght for material to 40mm diameter.
I also first made a hydraulic lift mechanism to lift the blade on return – it worked very well, but I found by proper implementation of the crank center of rotation in vertical relation to the blade frame con-rod attachment position, it was very easy to get blade lift on the return stoke – the rising crank pin ( the 'big-end' on the forward return stroke pushes the frame up, and the falling crank pin on power stroke pulls the frame down, ie, the blade is pulled into the work.
Take a look from around 55sec into the video – you can see the frame up and down motion quite nicely – all the way into maybe 1.5 minutes into the video.
Hacksaw Video
Clive Foster said:
If you want a quick build might be worth looking into replacing the built up from hexagon bar slide system with one of the linear rail and bearing block systems that can be got quite inexpensively these days.
I had also hoped this would work since it would save some DIY pains – I made a test frame and gantry and it worked ok – was noisy – the little balls in the slide block did not like a 100 strokes/min at all; even 60/min was not nice..I had my doubts though, and that noise translated into ball failure after about 3 hours of running at 100 strokes/min – lubrication was a bit difficult as the slide block has a wiper to keep grit out of the balls, and it would wipe away most of any lube applied. The blocks and rails I used were SKF ( damn expensive!) , the rail is a 40mm wide 20mm high rail, and I used two long blocks – 75mm long each.
I tend to runthe saw at 80 to 120 strokes/min all the time – anything slower is frustrating!
Joe
EDIT – eliminating errant emoji's!
Edited By Joseph Noci 1 on 13/09/2019 07:15:41