Knackered my Saw?

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Hoovie
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Knackered my Saw?

Post by Hoovie »

I used my Tenon saw for cutting some laminate flooring yesterday and today.
When I then went to use it on some softwood skirting,it made really hard work of it- usually it cuts softwood really nicely :scratch:

Have I knackered the saw using it on the Laminate? :?
I went to a bookstore and asked the saleswoman, "Where's the self-help section?"
She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.
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Post by ultimatehandyman »

Probably, Laminate is tough stuff.

Oddly enough I have been doing some laminate recently, hence I never made it online yesterday!
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Post by owen »

yes laminate destroys blades, i only use a jigsaw to cut the stuff as the blades are cheap and easily changed.
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Hoovie
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Post by Hoovie »

Damn! any recommendations about a replacement Tenon, or just buy a basic one (DIY use, so only gets used occasionally).

I was thinking about getting one of those Mitre Saws (which is what I tend to use the Tenon for, with a mitre block) - Worthwhile instead of another Tenon?

On the saw to use for laminate, I found the Tenon was great for quality of cut, a Circular saw was pretty good also, but the jigsaw tended to cause a lot of splintering ( I was cutting laminate side down).

Any recommendations for best blade for laminate (got two big rooms and a hallway to do soon)?
I went to a bookstore and asked the saleswoman, "Where's the self-help section?"
She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.
owen
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Post by owen »

usually you don't have any cut edges showing with laminate, so it doesn't matter.

cutting upside down should stop splintering, or you can use down cutting blades with the laminate face up. needs to be sharp though.
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Hoovie
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Post by Hoovie »

owen wrote:usually you don't have any cut edges showing with laminate, so it doesn't matter.

cutting upside down should stop splintering, or you can use down cutting blades with the laminate face up. needs to be sharp though.
I think I have been a bit mean on throwing away the used blades :oops: I will have a look for down blades as well :thumbright:

EDIT:just had a look on SFX - these look like a good deal!
http://www.screwfix.com/app/sfd/cat/pro ... 3&ts=15336
Any thoughts?
I went to a bookstore and asked the saleswoman, "Where's the self-help section?"
She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.
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ultimatehandyman
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Post by ultimatehandyman »

Hoovie wrote:Damn! any recommendations about a replacement Tenon, or just buy a basic one (DIY use, so only gets used occasionally).

I was thinking about getting one of those Mitre Saws (which is what I tend to use the Tenon for, with a mitre block) - Worthwhile instead of another Tenon?

On the saw to use for laminate, I found the Tenon was great for quality of cut, a Circular saw was pretty good also, but the jigsaw tended to cause a lot of splintering ( I was cutting laminate side down).

Any recommendations for best blade for laminate (got two big rooms and a hallway to do soon)?
I use a metal cutting blade in the jigsaw and it works well :wink:
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Post by Jaeger_S2k »

The Mitre Saws (cheap ones) are sh*t, bought a reasonable one from Bee and Pugh cut one piece of skirting and took it back, bought a mitre block and used my tenon and a good saw.

Jigs with a push blade work well, also try once you've marked the cut, covering the cut with clear adhesive tape, stick it down well (so don't get cheap stuff) once cut it peals of easy and reduces almost eliminates splintering.
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Post by Hoovie »

Doh! I totally forgot about masking tape! ::b Used that in the past to stop splintering.
Cheers for info on Mitre Saws - they generally seemed too cheap to be good - I hve a mitre block I get on well with :love3: lol - I'l ghet a new Tenon Saw to go along with it :thumbright:

Good tip on the metal jig baldes as well, UHM - I was using wood blades coz, laminate is wood ( ::b :oops: ::b ).
I went to a bookstore and asked the saleswoman, "Where's the self-help section?"
She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.
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ultimatehandyman
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Post by ultimatehandyman »

Hoovie wrote:Doh! I totally forgot about masking tape! ::b Used that in the past to stop splintering.
Cheers for info on Mitre Saws - they generally seemed too cheap to be good - I hve a mitre block I get on well with :love3: lol - I'l ghet a new Tenon Saw to go along with it :thumbright:

Good tip on the metal jig baldes as well, UHM - I was using wood blades coz, laminate is wood ( ::b :oops: ::b ).
Wood blades make a right mess of it because of the pitch of the blade. I'm off to cut my last few pieces now and then I can start to fit the beading :roll:
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Hoovie
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Post by Hoovie »

ultimatehandyman wrote: Wood blades make a right mess of it because of the pitch of the blade. I'm off to cut my last few pieces now and then I can start to fit the beading :roll:
That explains a lot actually.
Why are these things only obvious when someone points them out ::b :lol:

Where do you get your beading from, btw? I have tended to get mine from BnQ and it is not cheap stuff.
I went to a bookstore and asked the saleswoman, "Where's the self-help section?"
She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.
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Post by ultimatehandyman »

Angie got it all as a job lot from carpet right.

The beading is never cheap!

This laminate recommends a 15mm gap all the way around, but the beading only covers 16mm ::b what a joke!

Electric nailers are good for fixing the beading and make it easy to fix :wink:
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Hoovie
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Post by Hoovie »

I bet the flooring was a fair old price from Carpet Right!

Don't know what you are complaining about - got 1mm to play with :thumbright: :lol:
I went to a bookstore and asked the saleswoman, "Where's the self-help section?"
She said if she told me, it would defeat the purpose.
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Post by ultimatehandyman »

Think it was just over £1000 for 30 square metres of laminate, underlay and beading.
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Post by carhartt kid »

I use a Bahco Laminator hand saw for all laminate now. Cuts super fast

BAHCO Superior Hard Point Laminator Handsaw
20" (508mm). Thick blade makes for stable, straight cuts through laminate flooring and improved cross and rip cutting. Excellent for cutting wet timber. Fine cut. 11tpi.

* XT Hardpoint Teeth
* Triple-Ground
* Ergonomic Bi-Component Handle
* Low Friction Powder Coating



Image

About £11 from screwthicks or beancue!!
http://www.carhartt.com/
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