Building a bandsaw standAfter I built my second homemade bandsaw, I still needed to build a stand for it.The top drawer is just there to catch sawdust. The bandsaw is open on the bottom, and the stand open on the top. This works fairly well at directing the sawdust into the drawer so that I don't have to hook it up to a dust extraction system yet still don't get as much of a mess around my bandsaw. The bottom drawer is for storage. It's big enough to put coiled up bandsaw blades into. I had joined the corners of my other stands with very tight finger joints. But with my 16" bandsawonly weighing about 100 pounds (or 45 kg), I didn't need this stand to be quite as sturdy. So I played around with joining the corners with dovetail joints. I cut the dovetail joints on the bandsaw. The connecting pieces are short enough that you can put them upright in a drill press to drill the holes in the ends, but for expedience, I drilled the holes on my horizontal boring machineinstead. Except this is where I screwed up. I meant to put the connecting pieces into the frames so that they'd be on the sides, but I placed my frames on the machine horizontally when I drilled the holes. So now I had a horizontal series of holes in my frames, and my connecting pieces had to go on horizontally. Oops! So I glued another piece to my rails to make them "L" shaped, so that they'd have a horizontal and a vertical component to them. My plans differ slightly from what I built in this regard. Although I have a sacrificial fence for my router table, I would have had to cut a big hole into it for my slot cutter. I wasn't prepared to sacrifice so much of it just yet, so I took the sacrificial fence off for this operation. This leaves a rather large opening around the router bit, but with relatively large work pieces, there's less risk of them getting pulled into the opening. Here's routing the groove into the frame pieces Drawers for the tool standI used all recycled wood for the drawers. The top four pieces in the photo are the sides of some old wooden desk drawers. The four pieces of pine below were once part of some Ikea furniture. They had a few screw holes near the ends, which just happened to fall on some of the fingers, so these fell out. No big deal with so many fingers in the joint. I'm using a piece of 1970s style fake wood paneling as my drawer bottom. I have the finished side of the paneling facing up so I get the smooth surface on inside. Another plus is that with the drawer front going on last, I don't have to be as careful about not damaging or getting glue on the nice front during the construction process. I used some discarded exotic wood floorboards for the runners, orienting them so that the smooth prefinished side is facing up. The rails are just screwed onto the inside sides of the stand. These only support the top drawer, and that drawer only needs to hold sawdust, so there was no need to rabbet the rails into the frame. Bad idea... When I tried it out, I realized this idea was only good in theory. It's actually quite awkward to pick it up on one side of the saw from where I normally have it parked. And usually, I just want to pull the saw straight forward, and the wheels only allow side to side movement. Also, both the wheels and the feet are fairly soft rubber, so the saw kind of rocked back and forth on those. And finally, this arrangement isn't very safe for a tall machine like a bandsaw. There's the danger of over-tipping the saw when moving it. I think this arrangement of two wheels and two feet would be practical for lower stand in a less tight space. But I ended up taking those feet and wheels off and bought some 2-inch locking casters instead. You can see the opening in the top of the stand in this photo. The entire bottom of the saw is open, and sawdust can fall down into the top drawer. It's a system that works fairly well, though some of the sawdust seems to stick to the blade as it goes around the bottom wheel and ends up getting released somewhere around the top wheel. So some sawdust still ends up on the table. But overall, the system works. On my other saw, I once forgot to empty the drawer and let the sawdust pile all the way up to the lower bandsaw wheel. I noticed that the saw made a bit of a rumbling noise that it didn't normally make, and only realized the drawer was full when I investigated the rumble. The rumble probably came from all the extra sawdust that got squished between the blade and the lower wheel. No harm done though. Emptying the drawer and brushing the dust off the wheels was all that was needed. See also: of similar design Back to my Woodworking website. |
Saturday, 6 December 2014
Building a bandsaw stand
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