Teeth way to course. You might be able to do that if you used a very fine
tooth carbide blade. The key to metal saws is to always have two teeth in
contact with the metal at all times ( the work must be wider than the
distance between the teeth.
That could have been really unpleasant.
Bill
At 09:35 AM 4/2/2004, Mark Watson wrote:
>Here's a copy of a good safety topic with a link:
>
>________________________________________________________________________
>
>Message: 1
> Date: Thu, 01 Apr 2004 20:18:48 -0000
> From: "cooltool49" <cooltool49@yahoo.com>
>Subject: Messed up again
>
>Hi all.
>I'm still shaking about an incident that just ocurred a few minutes
>ago in my garage/shop.
>This is a bit off topic; however, shop safety should be of serious
>concern to all of us. I was very lucky.
>The following link it to my personal site, which I never use. I'll
>leave the files on there for a couple of weeks.
>I'm not proud of my stupidity, but display this to prevent someone
>else from encountering the same type of accident(maybe with less
>positive results)
>Je
|