Cutting Sheet Goods in Small Shop

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  • RagerXS
    Senior Member
    • Feb 2003
    • 501
    • Brookline, NH, USA.

    #1

    Cutting Sheet Goods in Small Shop

    This poll replaces the similar thread I started here: http://www.bt3central.com/forum/topi...TOPIC_ID=17147

    Short of a folding wide table kit with folding or rolling outfeed table, the BT3 with WTK can take up a lot of space in a small shop. I'm deliberating, so figured I would post a poll for the best option to cutting sheet goods in a small shop...

    Panel saws are pricey -- even shop made versions cost as much as or more than the BT3.

    EZ Smart Guide appears to provide accuracy, flexibility, and portability. Not cheap but considering everything reasonably priced.

    I intentionally omitted options for building a bigger shop and begging LOML for assistance as needed because I don't consider them viable. However, I will readily admit that begging LOML for assistance could lead to getting the green light for any necessary purchases... [8D]

    ~ Fred
  • Tundra_Man
    Veteran Member
    • Jan 2003
    • 1589
    • Sioux Falls, SD, USA.
    • Ryobi BT3100

    #2
    I thumb my nose at anonymity, and proudly advocate the saw board method!

    Extremely low cost, accurate and a lot easier for one person to use than the other methods. Get yourself a thick sheet of pink foam insulation, and you can lay the sheet on that to make your cuts. The sheet will survive many, many projects before it's so cut up it's no longer functional. Beats trying to balance sheet goods on sawhorses.
    Terry

    Life's too short to play an ordinary guitar: Tundra Man Custom Guitars

    Comment

    • gugie
      Established Member
      • Dec 2002
      • 439
      • Redwood City, CA, USA.
      • BT3000

      #3
      Ditto, Terry & DonHo!

      With fund and space no limit, I'd have a panel saw. But then, there's this $6000 Felder table saw I have my eyes on as well.

      But then I was playing around with putting a panel saw on the back of one of these:

      http://www.bt3central.com/forum/topi...TOPIC_ID=14898

      You can't see the back in the post, but if you download the PDF you can figure it out. That way I'd have a miter station, panel cutter, and lumber storage all in one. If I needed the panel saw, I could just remove the sheet goods I didn't want to cut, and have at it.

      Comment

      • DonHo
        Veteran Member
        • Mar 2004
        • 1098
        • Shawnee, OK, USA.
        • Craftsman 21829

        #4
        I too voted for the saw board. They are easy, cheap and if I can make good cuts with one they have to be easy :-)

        If I know what project I'm buying the sheet goods for AND it's possible(depends on cut layout), I get the store to make one or two cuts (most stores will do this for free). That makes the sheet goods easier to haul and maybe small enought to cut on the BT3.

        DonHo
        Don

        Comment

        • Otter
          Senior Member
          • Nov 2003
          • 865
          • Cumming, GA, USA.
          • Delta Left Tilt UniSaw

          #5
          I tried the guide and extention table way, the best results I get from a saw board.
          All men dream, but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act their dream with open eyes, to make it possible

          T.E. Lawrence

          Comment

          • RodKirby
            Veteran Member
            • Dec 2002
            • 3136
            • Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.
            • Mao Shan TSC-10RAS

            #6
            Saw board!
            Downunder ... 1" = 25.4mm

            Comment

            • Stytooner
              Roll Tide RIP Lee
              • Dec 2002
              • 4301
              • Robertsdale, AL, USA.
              • BT3100

              #7
              You left out my routine. Just cut a straight line with the circular saw. Okay, there is years of experience and a long reach available to me that permits this as a viable option.
              Lee

              Comment

              • mater
                Veteran Member
                • Jan 2004
                • 4197
                • SC, USA.

                #8
                quote:Originally posted by Tundra_Man

                I thumb my nose at anonymity, and proudly advocate the saw board method!

                Extremely low cost, accurate and a lot easier for one person to use than the other methods. Get yourself a thick sheet of pink foam insulation, and you can lay the sheet on that to make your cuts. The sheet will survive many, many projects before it's so cut up it's no longer functional. Beats trying to balance sheet goods on sawhorses.
                I'm sold on the saw board.
                Ken aka "mater"

                " People may doubt what you say but they will never doubt what you do "

                Ken's Den

                Comment

                • Stick
                  Senior Member
                  • Sep 2003
                  • 872
                  • Grand Rapids, MB, Canada.
                  • BT3100

                  #9
                  quote:Originally posted by mater
                  [I'm sold on the saw board.
                  I have the wide table and a full sheet outfeed table on my BT3100 and roller infeeds and I still use sawboards when I'm alone. I'll make panel cuts on the BT if I have a helper, but it's still awkward alone. Especially lengthwise cuts.

                  Comment

                  • LarryG
                    The Full Monte
                    • May 2004
                    • 6693
                    • Off The Back
                    • Powermatic PM2000, BT3100-1

                    #10
                    I use a Clamp 'N Guide, which I regard as a slightly more high-tech version of a saw board, and ... a router. The bit cuts smoother than a circular saw blade, and although the bit takes a wider kerf than a saw blade, I more than make up for this by being able to cut panels right to their final size, with none of the additional waste that would come from using a table saw to take off the excess.
                    Larry

                    Comment

                    • monte
                      ***** Windbag
                      • Dec 2002
                      • 5242
                      • Paw Paw, MI, USA.
                      • GI 50-185M

                      #11
                      Definately a shop made saw board.
                      Monte (another darksider)
                      Reporting Live from somewhere near Kalamazoo

                      http://community.webshots.com/user/monte49002

                      Comment

                      • don_hart
                        Veteran Member
                        • May 2003
                        • 1005
                        • Ledayrd, CT, USA.

                        #12
                        Saw Board of course
                        Don Hart

                        You live and learn. At any rate you live.

                        www.hartwoodcrafts.com



                        Comment

                        • jgscott987
                          Established Member
                          • Sep 2004
                          • 287
                          • Greensboro, NC, USA.
                          • BT3100 +

                          #13
                          I love my sawboards. I have a 4' and an 8' board, and they work great.

                          Comment

                          • mccrorey
                            Forum Newbie
                            • Jul 2003
                            • 64
                            • Plano, TX.

                            #14
                            I just got around to finally making a saw board and it sure is easy to use. I had just put a new 40-tooth Freud Avanti blade on my Skilsaw and the combination produces smooth, straight edges. And since the saw board is "zero clearance" I always know just where it is going to cut.

                            Only problem with my board is the the guide (double thick section) is only a couple of inches wide, so clamps get in the way of the saw motor. I'll need to work on that.
                            I always wanted to be somebody, but now I realize I should have been more specific. --Lily Tomlin

                            Comment

                            • YCF Dino
                              Forum Newbie
                              • Jul 2004
                              • 43
                              • Edison, NJ, USA.

                              #15
                              Hi Guys.
                              What about making this poll more interesting.
                              1.what method guarantee 100% clean cross cuts on veneer plywood?
                              2.What method is the safest and most accurate on tapered cuts?
                              3.What method is the safest and most accurate on narrow stock? 1/4"?
                              4.What method requires less space and with infinite expendability when needed? And fit in the trunk of a Fiat spider?
                              Because if you only see the EZ Smart as an expensive shooting board it will be...waste of money. But if you take another look at the open design and versatility of the system,this THING is everything you want it to be. Jointer? Straight line rip saw? Anti chip portable panel saw? Table saw? cross cutter? tapered cutter? A Manual CNC?
                              The perfect shooting board?
                              Hey guys. i have to help my Ez Smart
                              YCF Dino
                              YCF Dino

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