Merle
Well-Known Member
Hey folks,
I've never worked with DIW but finally picked up a pair of scales to use on my latest knife project. The scales are .50" thick which is much thicker than I need, so I had the brilliant idea of re-sawing one scale into two ~1/4" scales which would be sufficient for the smaller knife I'm making.
Got the band saw (Grizzly 14") all set up with the fence set and a feather board to keep the stock tight to the fence. My BS blade is one I use for ripping and re-sawing, I think it's 3/4" wide and 4 TPI. Made it about 1/32" into the wood and BAM... locked up the saw. Now I see why it's called iron wood
Can this rock-hard hardwood even be sawed traditionally? Or does it have to be machined? I have a portaband set up for metal work, I wonder if I could set up a block for a fence and chug through it with that.
Any thoughts?
thanks, andy
I've never worked with DIW but finally picked up a pair of scales to use on my latest knife project. The scales are .50" thick which is much thicker than I need, so I had the brilliant idea of re-sawing one scale into two ~1/4" scales which would be sufficient for the smaller knife I'm making.
Got the band saw (Grizzly 14") all set up with the fence set and a feather board to keep the stock tight to the fence. My BS blade is one I use for ripping and re-sawing, I think it's 3/4" wide and 4 TPI. Made it about 1/32" into the wood and BAM... locked up the saw. Now I see why it's called iron wood
Can this rock-hard hardwood even be sawed traditionally? Or does it have to be machined? I have a portaband set up for metal work, I wonder if I could set up a block for a fence and chug through it with that.
Any thoughts?
thanks, andy