*Subsurface contamination modeling...not swimsuit.Yeah, it does. But I wasnt.
I decided instead to prototype a bow saw. Heres a fine example of one. Its typical on homemade versions to use a length of bandsaw blade for the blade. I happened to have an old one sitting around, so I was in business. Typically you drill a hole in either end of the blade and run a pin through it to attach it to the frame. The only problem is that these holes have to be at fairly precise lengths to make it work. I dont have much faith in my precision, so I thought of a work-around. The brace of my saw would meet the two arms at pivoting mortise and tenons that would allow for a large margin of error in overall blade length. If you dont understand, keep going; a picture is worth 1000 words.
I had a nice scrap of maple lying around. Looks like a potential saw, doesnt it? Lilah thought so too.
Then I just eyeballed a shape for the arms and bandsawed them.
Anychoice, once the brace was finished I had a rough bow saw:
Now it was time for the hardware. I bought some 8mm bolts and ground flat sides opposite each other on the ends:
Then I drilled one side of the slot bigger than my pin bolt and the other side slightly smaller so that the bolt could tap it itself:
Now time to put it all together:
What happens is that by turning that stick in the middle, the string at the top of the arms tightens. This causes the arms to pivot on the brace and this is what tensions the saw blade. Believe it or not, this actually worked. There was, however, one detail that prevented the saw from cutting really will. If you examine the picture closely you can see that bent nails are pinning the blade in place, not the pin bolts. The saw blade was, in this case, too narrow to drill a hole large enough for the pins to fit through. The nails worked alright, but they allowed a lot of slop that prevented the blade from remaining aligned. This caused the saw cut to wander. No good. Ideally the bolt would tighten the blade in place and kept it aligned. Ill need a new bandsaw blade.
I also have to say that the pivoting mortise and tenon doesnt work great. Sometimes the whole frame "racks," like a big parallelgram. Its a little hard to explain in words. Oh well, it was a good effort.
My wife also did some woodworking today:
She broke her first board in taekwondo...the woman is truly lethal.
Maybe tomorrow Ill start that modeling project...
I also have to say that the pivoting mortise and tenon doesnt work great. Sometimes the whole frame "racks," like a big parallelgram. Its a little hard to explain in words. Oh well, it was a good effort.
My wife also did some woodworking today:
Maybe tomorrow Ill start that modeling project...
Categories:
Woodworking