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Air Nibbler - best way to cut sheet metal?
Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators
Air Nibbler - best way to cut sheet metal?
Not really 4x4 tech, but not that far off...
I am cladding a shed, and want to know what the best way to cut the colorbond sheeting is - mostly straight and diagonal cuts.
Is an air nibbler the way to go? And any reccomended brands or places to buy?
I am cladding a shed, and want to know what the best way to cut the colorbond sheeting is - mostly straight and diagonal cuts.
Is an air nibbler the way to go? And any reccomended brands or places to buy?
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RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
Thanks for that guys - but won't the grinder burn the paint - and be just as uneven???big lux wrote:grinder with cutting disc workd well 4 me
Most of the cuts will be covered by flashing, except for the sheeting on 2 sides (under the eaves). And these I will only need to cut myself if the supplier cuts them too long.
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RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
First of all when you say colourbond sheeting do you mean standard CGI or Flat Deck etc ?
If its CGI tin snips or any of the above will work.
If its not then i wouldn't use anything but tinsnips.
Go to bunnings and buy your self a set of IRWIN left and right tins snips and you'll do it easy.
Nick
If its CGI tin snips or any of the above will work.
If its not then i wouldn't use anything but tinsnips.
Go to bunnings and buy your self a set of IRWIN left and right tins snips and you'll do it easy.
Nick
[quote="Vulcanised"]more grunt than a row of drunk girls at a B&S ball!
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It is Trimdek. I have a set of left and right handed (wiss?) snips, and they suck at cutting this stuff (take ages and hard to get over the rubs). There is NO WAY I am cutting 30 metres of sheeting using tin snips.CWBYUP wrote:First of all when you say colourbond sheeting do you mean standard CGI or Flat Deck etc ?
If its CGI tin snips or any of the above will work.
If its not then i wouldn't use anything but tinsnips.
Go to bunnings and buy your self a set of IRWIN left and right tins snips and you'll do it easy.
Nick
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RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
yup and with what i said before as well... piece of flat works wonders in straight cuts and the sheeting would be fairly thin... so you'd go through it fairly quickly.Dees wrote:Try using pferd 1 mm cut off wheel's on a 5" grinder will cut it with
very little heat effect
custom bar work, 4x4 parts, trailers, anything out of steel/alloy :D
ok i am a sheetmetal roofer. NEVER use a grinder it will stop the zincalume being able to recoat or sacrifice itself over the iron underneath. air nibblers with a peice of flat or even better air shears. straigtness doesnt matter as the wall will be covered by a barge cap up top and a corner flashing on the sides.ISUZUROVER wrote:Thanks for that guys - but won't the grinder burn the paint - and be just as uneven???big lux wrote:grinder with cutting disc workd well 4 me
Most of the cuts will be covered by flashing, except for the sheeting on 2 sides (under the eaves). And these I will only need to cut myself if the supplier cuts them too long.
grinder WILL cause the sheet to rust in about 2 years. i always reroof where people have made there own and it is always rusty from grinders.
if the sheets are too long and you just need to shorten the whole sheet then use aviation sheers. get the red handled ones they are for right handed people but are for cutting left hand corners. the greens work best for lefties or for cutting right hand corners. yellow handled or straight cut snips just suck, dont bother.
turbos are nice but i'd rather be blown
[/quote]get a piece of 25x5 flat or whatever piece of flat you have.... clamp it to the job via vise grips or the like.. and run the grinder along it.. you'll have the straightest cut.[/quote]Dees wrote:Try using pferd 1 mm cut off wheel's on a 5" grinder will cut it with
very little heat effect
this is the way i have done it before works fine
So you also reckon that something like this (which I have):chunderlicious wrote:
if the sheets are too long and you just need to shorten the whole sheet then use aviation sheers. get the red handled ones they are for right handed people but are for cutting left hand corners. the greens work best for lefties or for cutting right hand corners. yellow handled or straight cut snips just suck, dont bother.
is a better way to shorten sheets than an air nibbler or air shears?
The 2 sides of the shed have to be cut neatly, as they won't be covered by barge capping (timber frame with overhanging eaves).
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RUFF wrote:Beally STFU Your becoming a real PITA.
Hate to bring you down but generally yes. I've never had much success doing smooth cut's with nibbler's of any sort no matter the technique. Snips there is definatly a lil bit of an art, and you will get mega arm pump but you'll be sweet.ISUZUROVER wrote:So you also reckon that something like this (which I have):chunderlicious wrote:
if the sheets are too long and you just need to shorten the whole sheet then use aviation sheers. get the red handled ones they are for right handed people but are for cutting left hand corners. the greens work best for lefties or for cutting right hand corners. yellow handled or straight cut snips just suck, dont bother.
is a better way to shorten sheets than an air nibbler or air shears?
The 2 sides of the shed have to be cut neatly, as they won't be covered by barge capping (timber frame with overhanging eaves).
If the actually cut your doing is going to be covered by a flashing once you've cut 2 ribs out you can generally "tear" the rest of the sheet, take's a bit of practice to get it to tear perfectly straight how ever.
NO GRINDING!!!!!!!!!!!!
If all the sheets are cut at the same height , when you get the pack of sheets cut them in 1 go using a 1mm 9 inch blade , very little heat , but be careful , I too am building a shed and this is how I am going to do it , Cheers Paul.
BLOWNZUK 1.3 efi,sc14 supercharger,hilux diffs,detroit lockers,stage 4 rockhopper,6 point cage,35 muddies.
yeah wiss snips are what i always use. if you do it for long enough your arm will actually clench up. its pretty cool for the first time if it is in sight then cut it close to the line with the nibblers and cut the line with the snips after, the smaller the width of sheet running down the sheet the easier it is to cut with snips. as for shortening by tearing. it is actually easy if you know how to tear anything else, pull to the left it goes there etc. just make sure you have a firm grip on the sheet as it will cut through you like .4mm steel wont even feel it untill you see blood pissing out
oh also, there is a thing called a screamer blade for a circular saw that will cut through sheets very easily. but it screams, you need plugs and muffs as it is a loud bad noise.
i also recomend actually fixing the sheets to the wall and cutting them up there as this will get the lengths perfect and the cut as straight as the frame.
anything else?
oh also, there is a thing called a screamer blade for a circular saw that will cut through sheets very easily. but it screams, you need plugs and muffs as it is a loud bad noise.
i also recomend actually fixing the sheets to the wall and cutting them up there as this will get the lengths perfect and the cut as straight as the frame.
anything else?
turbos are nice but i'd rather be blown
if using corrugated cut in one inch with snips place a foot on the the tin grab the off cut end and pull it up hard and fast only good for sqaure cuts
doesnt sound like it would work but trust me it does try it on some scrap as for angle cuts nine inch is the go but using the 1mm wheels on nine inch is a nightmare as they flex a lot normal cutting wheel will breeze through it
doesnt sound like it would work but trust me it does try it on some scrap as for angle cuts nine inch is the go but using the 1mm wheels on nine inch is a nightmare as they flex a lot normal cutting wheel will breeze through it
If i just overtook you head to your nearest mechanic
wiss snips or get a set of power shears that the roofers use. Probably a big cost for something youl never use again tho.
When your cutting with snips, remember to pull the waste away from the cut, like pull up toward you or push it away (depends iof your cutting left or right. If you have the waste at say 60degrees to the cut, its alot easier to cut anything, including the ribs in the trimdeck.
When your cutting with snips, remember to pull the waste away from the cut, like pull up toward you or push it away (depends iof your cutting left or right. If you have the waste at say 60degrees to the cut, its alot easier to cut anything, including the ribs in the trimdeck.
ok since everyone is saying use a grinder ill say this
tin has a warranty, cut it with a grinder and you have no warranty. use snips and nibblers or excalibur cutters (electro shears) if you can spare 400 bucks. but dont for any reason cut purlins, battens, roof sheets, wall clad, flashings, caps, aprons or anything else associated with zincalume roofing or framing with a grinder. it will corode very fast and screw up warranty claims or even any chance of an insurance company if it gets hail damaged. if they see rust they normally refuse to redo it. use a hacksaw if its all you have, a powersaw, jigsaw anything but a grinder.
if you can a water jet works well and so does those air jet things. but plasma wrecks it. even if painted over after it doesnt matter its screwed if its hot cut.
tin has a warranty, cut it with a grinder and you have no warranty. use snips and nibblers or excalibur cutters (electro shears) if you can spare 400 bucks. but dont for any reason cut purlins, battens, roof sheets, wall clad, flashings, caps, aprons or anything else associated with zincalume roofing or framing with a grinder. it will corode very fast and screw up warranty claims or even any chance of an insurance company if it gets hail damaged. if they see rust they normally refuse to redo it. use a hacksaw if its all you have, a powersaw, jigsaw anything but a grinder.
if you can a water jet works well and so does those air jet things. but plasma wrecks it. even if painted over after it doesnt matter its screwed if its hot cut.
turbos are nice but i'd rather be blown
chunderlicious is spot on only cut sheets with tinsnips i'm a shed builder and if i catch any of my workers useing a grinder on sheets they get a one way ticket to dole office. i use wiss snips for cutting around flashings and trim work but i found gilbows are the best for a straight line cut across the sheet even when on a angle. gilbows take alot of getting used to but i will challange anyone with there air/grinders tools that i could cut my sheet quicker and neater with my gilbows than the other guys.
also alot of sheet metal bluescope included voids there warrenty if been cut with grinder
also alot of sheet metal bluescope included voids there warrenty if been cut with grinder
Last edited by super jeep on Mon Oct 08, 2007 9:27 pm, edited 1 time in total.
jeep thing go topless
Wow, I'd never seen these.
Written up here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_Metal_Cutting_Saw
Sounds perfect for the job.
Written up here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cold_Metal_Cutting_Saw
Sounds perfect for the job.
This is not legal advice.
If it is painted over with an approved "colorbond" brand paint that seals out external contaminants .. how can it still be screwed ? ( I am not doubting what your saying about insurance companies looking for any reason to get out of coughing up the $$ .. but I bet a court case would beat em .. as the damage is in no way related to the cutting of the metal with an abrasive disk .. if it was rusted to all fark well thats another story unless you have new for old)chunderlicious wrote:ok since everyone is saying use a grinder ill say this
tin has a warranty, cut it with a grinder and you have no warranty. use snips and nibblers or excalibur cutters (electro shears) if you can spare 400 bucks. but dont for any reason cut purlins, battens, roof sheets, wall clad, flashings, caps, aprons or anything else associated with zincalume roofing or framing with a grinder. it will corode very fast and screw up warranty claims or even any chance of an insurance company if it gets hail damaged. if they see rust they normally refuse to redo it. use a hacksaw if its all you have, a powersaw, jigsaw anything but a grinder.
if you can a water jet works well and so does those air jet things. but plasma wrecks it. even if painted over after it doesnt matter its screwed if its hot cut.
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