Woodworker's Journal 1985-9-6, страница 73

Woodworker

Scroll Saw Specifications

Throat

Blade

Mai Cut

Stroke

Table

Table

Depth

Speed

Amps

Depth

Length

Size

Till

Weight

Price4

Company

Model

(inches)

(SPM)1

W110V

(Indies)3

(inches)

(WxL inches)

(degrees)3

(lbs.)

List

Street

AMT

4671

23

1.725/825

22

2V«

tO * 20 'Is

45L

81

S3205

Delta

40-601

18

40-2.000

12

2

'/i

16 dia

30L-45R

132

S1.025

S699*

Excaliber

EX II

19

60-1.460

3

1*/4

45L/45R

75

$1 099

$895*

Hegner Multimax

18V

18

400-1 700

2 83

2V«

1!t

7x9

38U15R

48

$1,098

$895*

RBI

216VS

16

200-1,550

2.5

2

'/«

10>v»»19

45L'45R

69

S799

$749*

RBI

220VS

20

200-1550

2.5

2

TV»

14 x 22J/i

45L'45R

97

S999

$909*

Reliant

0D26

26

1,720

2.2

2

10'/4 x 24J/<

45L

78

S329 95*

Sears

23640N

20

300-2.000

1.3

2

7

16 x 16

30L45R

143

$389.99*

Shops mitti

555272

20

650-1.350

1.7

2

1»/a?

16 x 23'/g

45D45R

65

S649*

V) indicates 2-speec H indicates variable speed 'Depth at cut wrtfi hotd-down blade guard removed S. - left R = right

V) indicates 2-speec H indicates variable speed 'Depth at cut wrtfi hotd-down blade guard removed S. - left R = right

list» suggested 1st price Street - actual prce at time ot writing direct mail order from company or average price in woodworking supply catalogs (*) Price includes stand. ^Pnce includes S5G worth ot tree merctiandse from AMT catalog

Check for this when you set up the saw. If you can't locate the problem, ship the saw back to ihe manufacturer for repair or replacement: all the saws featured in this article, including the two Taiwanese imports, come with excellent warranties and fast repair service.

Culling Performance—When evaluating the cutting performance of a scroll saw. there are several factors to consider.

Smoothness: The most important factor is smoothness of cut. The six "high-end" saws I tested all made clean, smooth-walled cuts thai required little, if any, sanding. When culling thick materials, you may notice some bowing in ihe cut. On the expensive saws, this is usually a result of improper blade tension. rather than poor saw design. Like-w ise. burning in the cul can be caused by several things. Improper tension, a dull blade, the wrong blade size, or too slow a feed rate in relation to blade speed are the usual culprits.

Precision: In this case. I'm referring to ihe blade's ability to follow a line. Most scroll saws, even the high-end ones, are prone to some blade drift lo one side or another. This is more a result of the tooth configuration of the blade, rather than the saw —most blades tend to drift slightly to the right of the line: occasionally, you'll gel one that drifts to the left. Once you get used to this, you learn to compensate for it. such as angling the stock into ihe blade slightly

No\cmber/December I<W2

when starting cuts. If the blade tends to wander off the line randomly in both directions, it's usually because you haven't tensioned it enough.

However, if a particular saw is prone to excessive blade drift or wander, it's often because the upper and lower arms are either out of vertical alignment, flexing excessively, or are loose. These factor-, can also affect the smoothness of cut and increase the saw's propensity to break blades When checking saws for cutting accuracy. you can perform two simple lesis without cutting any wood.

Tesi No. I: Firsi. with the saw OFF. grip ihe upper arm al the front and try to move it sideways if the arm seems loose or sloppy. the saw won't cut as accurately as one wilh a light, fairly rigid arm. You can expect some sideways flexing on all viwv usually, the longer ihe arm. the more flex will be apparent. The arms on ill the high-end saws, except the RBI 220VS. seemed fairly tight. On the RBI saw. ihe upper arm showed some slop, which probably accounted lor it's tendency lo burn thick Stock in tighi radius cuts during my tests. It was also more prone lo blade breakage lhan ihe other saw,. However. RBI spokesman Joe Chenoweth tells me the company is in the process of replacing the upper arm pivot's ball hearings with more rigid thru-,1 bearings, and beefing up the arm thickness 10 eliminate this problem. The improved versions should

be available by the time you read this article. Interestingly, the RBI 2I6VS had less vibration lhan the RBI 220VS. and was less prone to breaking blades.

Test No. 2: After tensioning the blade, turn the saw O.N and sight down the blade from front to back (wilh the teeth facing you). The less side-to-side blade "blur" you see. the more precisely the saw w ill cut. Of course, if you look al the blade from the side, you'll notice some blur because scroll saw blades move forward on the downstroke.

Aggressiveness—For production-oriented scrollers, the speed at which ihe saw cuts becomes important. Cutting speed is determined by three factors: blade speed, blade stroke length (vertical travel), and the amount of forward cutting action on each stroke, which I refer to as "cutting aggressiveness." The Delta is the most aggressive of the group due to its C-arm design—the blade moves in an arcing motion, taking a bigger bite on each stroke. The disadvantage of this radical cutting action is that the blade lends to make a slightly wider kerf on curved cuts, which is especially noticeable on tight radii. Tins only becomes a problem if your work requires hairline cuts, such as when making jigsaw puzzles. However, this can be overcome lo some extent by using a smaller blade lhan would be required on the less aggressive saws, such as the Hegner and Excaliber. Slow

73