Non Abrasive Metal Cutting Chop Saw

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Sujet : Non Abrasive Metal Cutting Chop Saw
De : none (at) *nospam* none.com99 (Bob La Londe)
Groupes : rec.crafts.metalworking
Date : 21. May 2025, 21:30:37
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <100ld5c$30grj$1@dont-email.me>
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
Evolution is the name that really brought these to the public attention, but lots of companies are selling them.  Fein, Makita, Milwaukee and others.  Basically a lower RPM version of an abrasive chop saw using a carbide blade for cutting mild steel and aluminum.
Now I know that regular wood cutting tools can cut aluminum and even to a lesser degree steel, but this seems to be a departure from that.  I've cut aluminum on a table and on a radial arm saw.  The biggest issue is chip welding (with aluminum) filling up the gullets of the teeth.  Oil, wax, and other things can reduce but not eliminate that problem due to the heat generated.  Its why I run flood coolant for all my CNC machines cutting aluminum.
A typical chop saw runs around 4000rpm.  These slower (slower) chop saws run around 1300 which should reduce heat buildup.  Are any of you guys running these regularly for aluminum?  It does appear that there are aluminum specific blades available.  Do they work a lot better than the mild steel cutting blades that normally come with one of these saws?  Do you experience chip welding cutting aluminum with one of these saws with either blade?
How do you like it?
I do have a hand held metal cutting circular saw already.  I've used if for stainless steel sheet (very hard on blades) and for aluminum thicker than its rated for.  Its about the size of a carpentry beam saw.  It works okay, but it doesn't "seem" to be any slower than my Skil worm drive I use for wood cutting.  To be fair I haven't put a sticker on it so I can check it with the optical tach.
I also have a couple horizontal band saws.  One I run with coolant for aluminum.  They work, but they are "Harbor Freight" saws.  Keeping them aligned and square is a constant chore.  Usually I just cut the pieces long, then square and cut to length on the manual mill beofre moving the blank to one of the CNC mills.  I waste a couple inches over the course of chopping blanks from a 12ft (standard stock length) piece of bar stock.  A couple inches of waste is no big deal, but a couple inches added onto the remnant at the end of the bar can mean one more blank and one more completed part.
--
Bob La Londe
CNC Molds N Stuff
--
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Date Sujet#  Auteur
21 May 25 * Non Abrasive Metal Cutting Chop Saw5Bob La Londe
21 May 25 +- Re: Non Abrasive Metal Cutting Chop Saw1Leon Fisk
7 Jun 25 `* Re: Non Abrasive Metal Cutting Chop Saw3Bob La Londe
7 Jun 25  `* Re: Non Abrasive Metal Cutting Chop Saw2Bob La Londe
7 Jun 25   `- Re: Non Abrasive Metal Cutting Chop Saw1Bob La Londe

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