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                      PVC extruded blades 
         
        The new PVC extruded blades  
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                        		| Chainsaw blades! | 
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                        Making a set of blades with a Chainsaw. 
                        Oztules, a forum member from Flinders Island, has come up with a faster way of making the rough shape for a set of timber blades. Getting the rough cut is one of the most time consuming parts of timber blade manufacture, and if your like me and couldnt cut a straight line if your life depended on it, then Oztules method might be the answer! If you're not familiar with the process of making timber blades, then I recommend you check out Hugh Piggotts site or OtherPower, both excellent web sites for home made windmills. 
                        In Oztules words..... 
                        Posted: 02 August 2008  
                        It has been about 9 months since we cut up a pine tree from the other side of   the Island. Out of this I got some 8"x2" planks cut up by the bloke with the   portable saw mill. 
                          They have sat on the floor of the shed for all this   time and were now much much lighter than they were when they were green.  
                               
                          I had been lucky that they were green, as it gave me a good excuse to do   nothing....but alas, it was time to consider doing something. 
                          I am the first   to admit that I'm a lazy slob, and the thought of getting a hand saw and doing   all the cuts and then chiseling them out..... well after doing a small 8' set   some years ago, I just couldn't get excited about it.  
                               
                          If only there were   a way to do it easy. I have no band saw, so there was no quick way of getting   rid of a lot of timber before the carving began (as they show on Otherpower), so   I contemplated life with 30kgs of shavings from what was to be my 4M blade set.  
   
                          I had been sawing up some firewood out in my forest one day, when the   thought of slitting the timber with the chain saw came into focus... Ahh yes   thats it!!.  
   
                          Flushed with my new enthusiasm, I decided to see how   accurately I could saw in a straight line on a log..... it turns out that not   very accurately at all summed it up quite nicely. I was thoroughly beaten again.  
   
                          I needed a plan B.  
   
                          It was while I was re-reading the way Danb   did his rough and simple 10' set, that it hit me that doing it his way meant   that it was all straight lines.... so it was decided. A JIG!!  
   
                          Here is   the 20 minute jig I came up with. It uses the Dans 3 degree at the tip, 6 degree   at the center and extrapolate to the sensible end of your timber size, and blade   thickness= 1/8 blade width, and best line of fit from the tip to somewhere near   the root.  
   
                          It consists of two pieces of 3x1 down either side of my 4th   piece of 8x2 timber I had. It is 2M long.  
   
     
   
                          Here is a   timber blank sitting in the jig ready for "processing" It needs to be held down   while slitting obviously, and I used the clamps for this.  
   
     
   
                          Here   is a full view of it..... yes lots of pictures just in case anyone else is silly   enough to try it.  
   
     
   
   
                          Well now I guess I must show how we get the chain saw to follow the   jig we have set up.  
   
                          It was solved simply (like all things I do) by just   welding a few bits of steel 6mm strapping together to give me 12mm thick bits,   boring holes through 2 parts of the blade bar, and installing the guides with   some 6mm bolts. It looks like this:  
     
   
                          and one   for the other extremity like this:  
     
   
                          It turned   out that they allowed exactly 10mm clearance from the jig to the cut wood. The   side pieces of timber were offset 10mm too low on either side from our actual   line. This meant that when I cut along the jig, sliding along on the skids, I   will be cutting 10mm above the jig line  
                          Here are a few pics of how that   looks:  
     
     
     
   
                          Here we are part way through  
     
     
   
     
   
                         
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