BigBubbaG Posted March 4, 2019 Report Posted March 4, 2019 Now that I have a 788, which doesn't accept pinned blades, I have a couple dozen pinned blades that are no good to me. Is there a way to get the pins out without damaging the blade? Or, are these blades now trash to me? OCtoolguy 1 Quote
heppnerguy Posted March 4, 2019 Report Posted March 4, 2019 I sure do not know the answer to this one, but I wonder if one could grind the pins off with a bench grinder. Not sure at all, but perhaps you could give it a try and see what happens. Dick] heppnerguy OCtoolguy and SCROLLSAW703 2 Quote
MrsN Posted March 4, 2019 Report Posted March 4, 2019 If you grab the pin with a pliers and wiggle it a bit, it usually pops out. WayneMahler, JTTHECLOCKMAN and OCtoolguy 3 Quote
BigBubbaG Posted March 4, 2019 Author Report Posted March 4, 2019 55 minutes ago, MrsN said: If you grab the pin with a pliers and wiggle it a bit, it usually pops out. Thanks. I'll give it a try 57 minutes ago, heppnerguy said: I sure do not know the answer to this one, but I wonder if one could grind the pins off with a bench grinder. Not sure at all, but perhaps you could give it a try and see what happens. Dick] heppnerguy I had thought of that. My concern would be heat. If it gets too hot during the grinding process it may ruin the temper of the blade making it weak and break. I'll let ya know how it goes. Thanks again! OCtoolguy 1 Quote
RabidAlien Posted March 4, 2019 Report Posted March 4, 2019 Drill a small hole in a piece of scrap metal (1/16", I think, is what I used. Maybe 3/32"), put one side of the pin in the hole, tap with hammer until flush. Then poke through with icepick or punch or use needlenose to pull on through. Attaching the metal to a scrap of wood with a larger diameter hole through it helps. Basically, the pins are just pressed into holes in the blades, held there by pressure. They're not soldered or welded in place. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
BigBubbaG Posted March 5, 2019 Author Report Posted March 5, 2019 3 hours ago, RabidAlien said: Drill a small hole in a piece of scrap metal (1/16", I think, is what I used. Maybe 3/32"), put one side of the pin in the hole, tap with hammer until flush. Then poke through with icepick or punch or use needlenose to pull on through. Attaching the metal to a scrap of wood with a larger diameter hole through it helps. Basically, the pins are just pressed into holes in the blades, held there by pressure. They're not soldered or welded in place. Thanks! Got my blade order from Bear today. Now if it will warm up enough to go outside. RabidAlien and OCtoolguy 1 1 Quote
RabidAlien Posted March 5, 2019 Report Posted March 5, 2019 2 hours ago, BigBubbaG said: Thanks! Got my blade order from Bear today. Now if it will warm up enough to go outside. Woohoo! Found the article....I'd initially run across it on Pinterest, and remembered I'd Pinned it. Here ya go: https://www.woodmagazine.com/woodworking-tips/techniques/skills/scroll-saw-tips?catref=wd146&page=2 OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Rolf Posted March 5, 2019 Report Posted March 5, 2019 (edited) I would do what Rabid Alien suggested except I would use a piece of maple, easier to drill. Edited March 5, 2019 by Rolf OCtoolguy and RabidAlien 2 Quote
RabidAlien Posted March 5, 2019 Report Posted March 5, 2019 (edited) 5 hours ago, Rolf said: I would do what Rabid Alien suggested except I would use a piece of maple, easier to drill. I used a scrap of 2x4. Edited March 5, 2019 by RabidAlien OCtoolguy and Rolf 1 1 Quote
OCtoolguy Posted March 5, 2019 Report Posted March 5, 2019 43 minutes ago, RabidAlien said: I used a scrap of 2x4. By all means. I have way more 2x4 scraps laying around than maple. RabidAlien 1 Quote
savethebeer Posted March 6, 2019 Report Posted March 6, 2019 More Great tips. I haven't used pinned for 2 saws but I kept the blades ( just cause they sat in a corner and didn't bother anyone) Now I can get my monies worth out of them again. Bob OCtoolguy and BigBubbaG 2 Quote
OCtoolguy Posted March 6, 2019 Report Posted March 6, 2019 4 hours ago, savethebeer said: More Great tips. I haven't used pinned for 2 saws but I kept the blades ( just cause they sat in a corner and didn't bother anyone) Now I can get my monies worth out of them again. Bob But, are they any good? Most pinned blades are probably junk. I would think anyway. And too big for most projects. Scrappile and Rolf 2 Quote
BigBubbaG Posted March 7, 2019 Author Report Posted March 7, 2019 6 hours ago, octoolguy said: But, are they any good? Most pinned blades are probably junk. I would think anyway. And too big for most projects. I have some pinned blades (Olson) that are pretty small. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
Rolf Posted March 9, 2019 Report Posted March 9, 2019 On 3/6/2019 at 12:59 PM, octoolguy said: But, are they any good? Most pinned blades are probably junk. I would think anyway. And too big for most projects. I have to agree, most of the pinned blades that I have had and used eons ago are huge. I kept mine for the copping saw but for the scroll saw they are way too big for my work. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
RabidAlien Posted March 9, 2019 Report Posted March 9, 2019 Pinned blades are only limited by the size of the pilot hole and the skill of the operator. They can still cut some pretty fine details, as long as you can get a hole in there for the blade. OCtoolguy 1 Quote
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