Hi All,
The 24tpi Swedish steel blade “for steel and brass” is now about £11.30 but the diamond job is now £101, the cooling stuff is another £46. The pics still show the nut and bolt sectioned but also show the cooling gear in place so what blade was used and how hard the bolt was is unknown. Axminster now list a bimetal blade that was not in the old cat.
I mostly use 14tpi blades -mainly for 3-10mm hardwoods- but the little bandsaw struggles with thicker wood soft or hard. The very important top guide has three races – like most other bandsaws- but the equally important lower guide is a slot in a cast post-no races. My top guide races need replacing frequently . So I don’t cut metal on this machine, it gets used for curved cuts in thin wood or plastic and some modest rough shaping.
Axminster rate this machine as a “Hobby” tool – would not disagree, used gently on thinner softer materials the bandsaw is a useful miniature tool for light use but I would use other tools to cut any metal parts. ( the motor is very small, the steel blades 3-5 mm wide and 0.5-0.4 mm thick)
The H/V metal cutting bandsaw is a much more capable metalworking tool and about 80% of the price of the Proxxon bandsaw. It is a great help in chopping up mild steel, have used two from Draper over ten years to cut up large quantities of M/S and ally tube with bimetal blades.
You can fit a bimetal blade to many regular vertical bandsaws and cut a little M/S at a gentle rate – the most important bit is to listen to the machine, don’t use a worn out blade or force the cut AND keep fingers and other bits away from the blade. Be prepared for a not perfectly straight cut- but that’s another thread.
Chronos have a downloadable current Proxxon catalogue on their website.
I should add that we use several Proxxon tools in our hobby business and find them very suitable for some miniature jobs, the FKS/E table saw, DH40 thickneser and
the table router get a lot of use for working with around 0.1mm tol in hardwood.
regards to all,
Alan.