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Hey all just finished making a notcher to notch out some pipe. I purchased some cheap HSS bi metal hole saws but they didnt last more than 1 notch. What brand of hole saws are people using?
Sutton brand work fine in a proper Notcher. Looking at your notcher you have to much distance between the support and the tube you are notching. It would work a lot better if you can get rid of the Chuck and the arbour and have the hole saw mounted directly to the shaft.
RUFF wrote:Sutton brand work fine in a proper Notcher. Looking at your notcher you have to much distance between the support and the tube you are notching. It would work a lot better if you can get rid of the Chuck and the arbour and have the hole saw mounted directly to the shaft.
i couldnt agree more
enother thing to concider is to cut you tube to length first, that way only one side of the hole saw is doing the work
i have found that if you try to put the complete hole saw through the tube it tends to pull the teeth from the saw
use the spray on cutting oil and dont let it get too hot and you should get a couple hundred notches out of a normal holesaw (not the one you have), speedworx sell hole saws that have finer teeth and these work even better.
can anyone with a proper notcher show me a picture of how the holesaw attatches to the shaft. I would like to cut down shaft legnth and het rid of chuck and arbor like RUFF said. There is too much movement and it does grab a fair bit.
Last edited by sanger on Sun Nov 25, 2007 7:43 pm, edited 1 time in total.
after thinking about it more im am convinced i need to reconsider my bearing and shaft situation. I think using sealed bearings and a 1" shaft should eliminate chatter. Does anyone have a homade notcher that can chime in with some advise.
im sure it would work well for the money. But i have $100 invested into it at the moment so i would like to make it so it bomproof. Need some input on design as i'm not the best in that area.
IMHO you're getting chatter coz the whole thing is too long and flexible.
Ya need to shorten everything up.
see if ya can get the shaft threaded and mount the saw directly onto it. The bearing needs to be as close to the work as ya can get it.
You also need to keep the saw speed down as much as you can, under 1000 rpm.
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Eddy wrote:IMHO you're getting chatter coz the whole thing is too long and flexible.
Ya need to shorten everything up.
see if ya can get the shaft threaded and mount the saw directly onto it. The bearing needs to be as close to the work as ya can get it.
You also need to keep the saw speed down as much as you can, under 1000 rpm.
Thanks eddie thats what i paln on doing. The shaft is 16mm stainless steel is it a stout enough material. Also tapping a thread on the shaft to accept the holesaw wont work for the smaller holesaw as it has a smaller diameter thread. Spose could get an adapet machined up.
dont bother with the cheap ones like the one posted in the link..they have a bush on the shaft not a sealed bearing like the better quality ones from Speedwerx and JD2..the bush will flog out fairly quick and give you an offset notch..
if you want to get out of this with spending the least amount of money then shorten the shaft right up and get the end threaded..there is an adapter you can get so the shaft will suit either small or large holesaws or if you are only going to use that size holesaw then get it threaded to suit that particular holesaw..
i have a JD2 TN 100 notcher and i use a $99 trade tools low speed high torque drill on it and the holesaws i use are $8.90 trade tools direct yellow HSS Bi Metal holesaws..i use Trefolux on the holesaw as a cutting compound..i get heaps of notches out of each one..
anoyther way to do it is to buy the shaft, bearings and holesaw adapter from someone like Speedwerx or JD2 and mount them to your base plate..alternatively if the shaft and adapter is dearer than $100 from them then buy the dodgy cheap notcher and make a sealed bearing housing to suit the shaft as the shafts are the same size in both the cheap and dear notchers
80lsy gq wrote:dont bother with the cheap ones like the one posted in the link..they have a bush on the shaft not a sealed bearing like the better quality ones from Speedwerx and JD2..the bush will flog out fairly quick and give you an offset notch..
if you want to get out of this with spending the least amount of money then shorten the shaft right up and get the end threaded..there is an adapter you can get so the shaft will suit either small or large holesaws or if you are only going to use that size holesaw then get it threaded to suit that particular holesaw..
i have a JD2 TN 100 notcher and i use a $99 trade tools low speed high torque drill on it and the holesaws i use are $8.90 trade tools direct yellow HSS Bi Metal holesaws..i use Trefolux on the holesaw as a cutting compound..i get heaps of notches out of each one..
anoyther way to do it is to buy the shaft, bearings and holesaw adapter from someone like Speedwerx or JD2 and mount them to your base plate..alternatively if the shaft and adapter is dearer than $100 from them then buy the dodgy cheap notcher and make a sealed bearing housing to suit the shaft as the shafts are the same size in both the cheap and dear notchers
dave
Thanks for the detailed reply. Do you think 16mm shaft is adequate? Or should i look at upgrading to 1" shaft and make a new bearing block.
Last edited by sanger on Sun Nov 25, 2007 8:44 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Eddy wrote:IMHO you're getting chatter coz the whole thing is too long and flexible.
Ya need to shorten everything up.
see if ya can get the shaft threaded and mount the saw directly onto it. The bearing needs to be as close to the work as ya can get it.
You also need to keep the saw speed down as much as you can, under 1000 rpm.
Thanks eddie thats what i paln on doing. The shaft is 16mm stainless steel is it a stout enough material. Also tapping a thread on the shaft to accept the holesaw wont work for the smaller holesaw as it has a smaller diameter thread. Spose could get an adapet machined up.
16mm should be fine as the JD2 i have is 3/4 stainless steel..the adapters to suit the smaller holesaws can be bought for a few dollars so you can get the shaft machines to suit the smaller holesaws
actually i just remembered i think ihave a couple of spare shafts in the shed..i have one good one i want to keep as a spare but if you want the other one which is flogged out where it goes into the drill then you can have it..it is still fine on the end that screws onto the holesaw..just tidy it up on the bit that goes onto the drill..i willhave a look tomorrow and mkae sure i didnt throw it out