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Fretsaw


ben2008

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Thanks everyone for the comments.

If I buy one, I am going to use it for some very small cutouts in the center of a scroll saw project I'm working on. I'm really not very good at setting up my saw for those tiny cutouts. I just can't seem to thread the blade through that tiny #68 hole without bending the #02 blade while attaching it to the bottom clamp of my Excalibur. My hands are just a bit too shaky in my old age. My eyes are not all that great either. I rarely ever use such a tiny blade. Most all scroll work I have done I use a number 3 or 5 blade or even bigger. The 02 blade was recommended for parts of this project. Never again.

Anyway

I thought I would try and thread the blade through the tiny hole off the saw first, then attach the hand fret saw too it and attempt to cut out the piece by hand.  I only have about 8 or 10 of those teeny, tiny cutouts to do. The rest I can do with a #3 and a #5 blade. The fretsaw is not going to bankrupt me. It is only about 20 bucks with free shipping. I think it may be worth a try as I am not doing very well now. 

I do want to make these as Christmas gifts for my great grandkids.

Thanks again

Ben

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These two tips have been posted here by several others and have worked very well for me. Using an awl, press it into that #68 hole from the back twisting it around a bit to create a funnel effect. Then using a plain old fashioned wood pencil twist the tip of the pencil a bit in the hole. This leaves a bigger visual target to see and the funnel shaped hole is easier to thread.

I nearly always use a #68 drill and #2/0 blade. The above has helped my tired old eyes.

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2 hours ago, Rockytime said:

These two tips have been posted here by several others and have worked very well for me. Using an awl, press it into that #68 hole from the back twisting it around a bit to create a funnel effect. Then using a plain old fashioned wood pencil twist the tip of the pencil a bit in the hole. This leaves a bigger visual target to see and the funnel shaped hole is easier to thread.

I nearly always use a #68 drill and #2/0 blade. The above has helped my tired old eyes.

Thanks Les, sounds like a good tip. I'll give it a try tomorrow. Been working on another project today. Had to get my mind off that awful experience with that other fiasco.

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3 hours ago, Rockytime said:

These two tips have been posted here by several others and have worked very well for me. Using an awl, press it into that #68 hole from the back twisting it around a bit to create a funnel effect. Then using a plain old fashioned wood pencil twist the tip of the pencil a bit in the hole. This leaves a bigger visual target to see and the funnel shaped hole is easier to thread.

I nearly always use a #68 drill and #2/0 blade. The above has helped my tired old eyes.

No matter what dill bit I use (#68 and up) I use a dremel carving bit, that looks like a ball at the end of a shaft, to debur the hole and create a funnel shaped dimple on the back side at each hole. Makes threading a 2/0 blade, or even larger blades, from below much easier.  I think this might be easier than the Awl trick.  

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