mino
Member
- Joined
- May 5, 2016
- Messages
- 1,984
I think we have a different concern. You are thinking in terms of a CNC. A Tracksaw is not a CNC, nor a slider, it has different dynamics and different strengths and different weaknesses.smorgasbord said:...
But, full-depth climb cutting, when properly controlled, does leave a better edge. The physics of the chip explain why.
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For that reason I do not see a climb-cut as something of a major interest for plywood. There the anti-splinter strip on FS/2 does a pretty good job when a sharp blade is used. My concern is the even harder cases of laminated stuff - there the problem is where the blade is "existing" the material. With laminated chipboard once you have the blade "exiting" it will break out pieces of the hard laminate no matter how sharp the blade. Here a scoring cut helps as the blade is "going in" from outside to the material for both sides of the cut, allowing both sides to be perfectly clean, not only one side (that is the bottom one with a tracksaw).
From your comments I believe you should either borrow or get a used TS 55 R set with rails to get "your hands dirty" with a tracksaw and go for the more nuanced decisions after that. Even better would be getting a small project done at a shop of a friend who is fully stacked for tracksaw use. With all accessories that actually make it a practical thing. There are some things that are just hard to translate before you use it for a couple projects as experience from a TS does not (directly) translate for tracksaw use. And vice versa.
[member=58857]Crazyraceguy[/member] would be probably the best guy to consicely comment this.