Testing Woodworkings Most Dangerous Techniques
I Tested Woodworkings Most Dangerous Tool
Try Rocket Money for free: rocketmoney.com/unscrewed
#RocketMoney #personalfinance
I finally found a 16" radial arm saw to try some of the insane tests from the manufacturers user manual in the 1960's
Shop Shades - NOW SHIPPING - bit.ly/ShopShades_Unscrewed
Want to see more tool content ?
Are TEMU Drills Junk? - • Are TEMU Drills Junk?
I Bought Banned Woodworking Tools - • I Bought Banned Woodwo...
I Test Cheap vs. Expensive Woodworking Tools - • I Test Cheap vs. Expen...
I Actually Bought Woodworkings Most Dangerous Tool - • I Actually Bought Wood...
#DangerousTool #woodworkingtools #tools
Пікірлер: 700
Try Rocket Money for free: rocketmoney.com/unscrewed #RocketMoney #personalfinance
@sailopenbic
Ай бұрын
Cool, where are the $60 safety glasses I ordered months ago?
@Jiiu27
Ай бұрын
I Love your videos and channel 🩶
@BoBandits
29 күн бұрын
10,000 likes already!
@goncalovazpinto6261
26 күн бұрын
May I suggest using a clamp to hold the piece against the fence instead of your hand for the bevel cut, so you can stand farther away from the blade and off of it's path if it decides to do a Mad Max boomerang on you.
@JacobParkinson-vp5tc
25 күн бұрын
Can u make a custom chess board It’s my favorite game to play
Quick question.... Are we sure Peter is a fan, and not someone who despises you? LOL 😄
@mromutt
Ай бұрын
That is 100% a fair and valid question lol, also is he possibly the beneficiary on the life insurance or in contact with whoever is XD
@alexandraw909
Ай бұрын
No truer questions or statements were ever fucking written!!! THIS MACHINE IS SCARY AS HELL - even in just the mind, let alone reality!!
@jfoy.99
29 күн бұрын
Growing up this was the first benchtop saw my dad bought. I started using it when i was 14. Maybe it's just due to my experience with it, but i don't find it that scary. I never did any gut cut style cutting...
"Nope. No no no no nope." Glad you stopped. I was fully puckered and I wasn't even in the shop.
@AAK007
29 күн бұрын
I laughed so hard at this lol. Good one
@bradquinn2859
29 күн бұрын
I'm fully puckered and I haven't even watched the video.
I was trained on a saw that size in the 1980s in my cabinet making class and again in my wood technology classes. My instructor kept stressing, "never bend your elbow when using a radial arm saw”. Keep your elbow joint in your arm locked and pull the blade back by rotating your torso. That prevents the saw from running away with you and lurching toward you. The second safety rule with it is to never cross your arms. If you keep your arms from crossing, it helps keep your other hand from getting in line with the cut and keeps your hand attached to your body. I still use this rule with sliding compound miter saws. My instructors also warned us to only use the radial arm saw for crosscuts and leave the rip cuts to the table saw. All three of my instructors at two different colleges had all three of these rules in place.
@usunited5756
11 күн бұрын
I am 66 now, when I was a kid, starting at 14-15, I worked for my uncle who built apts. we would use such a saw for prep work. 2 by blocks, posts, various sized headers (from 2x4 headers to 2x12 headers) and such. Unc would have a list for me every morning. I miss those days, it was work, but it was fun. If you know what I mean.
You are missing parts that make the saw a lot safer. The large hole on the front of the blade guard holds a rod with anti-kickback pawls. There also should be a guard in the rear that holds the material down which greatly reduces climb and kick-back as you feed sheet stock in. I wouldn't ever feed a rip cut without the rear hold down guard; the way you did it was pretty dangerous.
@jimolsz8856
Ай бұрын
Was just gonna say that , mine still has them
@collar1022
Ай бұрын
I came to the comments looking for this. The anti-kickback pawls are missing. And on my 6.5 Black and Decker (about 75 year old tool [Green and Red]) the blade guard is adjustable. It can be 'tilted' forwards and back so you don't get blasted with dust / debris.
@CKDz
Ай бұрын
Sorry I will keep my table saw and 12" sliding miter, thanks. This saw died a very necessary and timely death, IMO.
@mromutt
Ай бұрын
I was just commenting on how there is supposed to be something that I thought was called a claw! I was so close on the name lol
@georgequalls5043
28 күн бұрын
My Craftsman RAS had extra guards over the blade. Yours must be missing some.
Helpful hint, always loosen the nut in the same direction that the teeth go. Tighten against the teeth
@BeachsideHank
29 күн бұрын
Elegantly simple yet very useful tip, thanks for sharing.
I have a 12" craftsman, I would love to have a 16", I also agree with these saws being to dangerous for beginners. my high school woodshop class had one and our instructor had it OFF LIMITS to everyone but advanced class
@sioward2753
Ай бұрын
My father has a 12" Craftsman radial and I have a 90 degree scar on my left arm from it due to a ripping accident. Blade grabbed the oak board he was ripping and shot it at me. I somehow got my arm between it and my head or it could have been a lot worse. I still don't know how it didn't break my arm. Far as I know, he hasn't used that saw for ripping wood since and I'm VERY careful of the direction a saw blade is travelling when cutting.
@cjamesfox
Ай бұрын
"advanced class" of 16 years olds with 16" death blades... FML... old school days didn't care about safety
@MichaelMSchofield
Ай бұрын
We had one in my shop class too and our instructor paid ZERO attention to anything... I used that thing all the time, freeken awesome!
@JMB676
29 күн бұрын
Yeah I grew up using a craftsman 12”.
@Angel-mi6qs
25 күн бұрын
@@cjamesfox pretty sure advanced means more experience aka older students not 16 year olds
This video is just 24 minutes of anxiety, so many squirrely moments. Def a machine that'll never be in my shop that's for sure.
@villemaanselka9241
Ай бұрын
I thougt i was The only one😂
@mromutt
Ай бұрын
I have always wanted one but seeing these videos makes me never want to even be around one.
@natepeterson7145
Ай бұрын
I'd buy a Shop Smith before this death trap. Geeze, too sketchy.
@beefieschannel8955
19 күн бұрын
@@mromutt look up brian weekley, he understands how to use the saw properly. this video is a waste of time as he threw it up for views without truly learning the saw.
My dad has one of these in his woodshop in the garage...I only remember him using it for crosscutting..but even as a kid I was always intimidated by it just because of the sound and the amount of airflow it put out..
DEFINITELY GET A ELECTRIC BRAKE FITTED! Had a similar saw in the place I did my apprenticeship, only used for cross cutting batons before machining down.
@MatMatMattMatt
Ай бұрын
Yeah, just for reference the legal time for a bladed machine to come to a halt in the UK is less than 10 seconds :)
@WoodMachinist
Ай бұрын
With a 16" blade the force of a DC brake making it come to a stop would likely unscrew the nut holding the blade on because the blade isn't pinned to the arbour, so the inertia of the blade wants to continue spinning and thus unscrews the nut. That said, you could probably adjust the brake to stop in 10-15 seconds or so which wouldn't cause so much strain as stopping in 2 or 3 seconds, still much better than 5 minutes.
@mromutt
Ай бұрын
@@WoodMachinist As long as it can just slightly slow it without trying to stop it that would make a huge difference in its safety and use. Kind of like brakes on a bike, you can use them to add just a slight friction to take a little moment out without just clamping down and stopping like you would do going down hill. I don't know if you would get that kind of adjustment out of an electric brake addon but if you can I think thats the way to go.
When ripping, you turn the blade guard down so it's just above the wood being ripped. That way it doesn't chuck so much wood at you and in later versions they had an anti-kickback tool that was on the guard.
@tomaskara902
Ай бұрын
Malecki is trying to show this saw as best as he can but these details make this saw less dangerous though
@JohnMaleckiUnscrewed
Ай бұрын
I appreciate this. I wont be using it for that function tho haha
@chrisdzisiak7540
Ай бұрын
I love your work and channel and subscribed long ago! But. Sorry , even if you don’t use this function there are many, many, many foolish people. These people will take what you as an experienced wood work shows and assume it’s okay, “ John” did it! Please be a good example. I mean talk the line but play safe under the top story. I personally own Dewalt and Delta/Rockwell RAS , I love them and are very careful when using them.
@vexxxgaming7303
Ай бұрын
@@chrisdzisiak7540The reality is that no one is responsible for the safety of another adult except for the adult themselves. If someone chooses to be a moron, that is their fault and only theirs. It is not up to John, you or anyone else to keep people from doing dumb shit.
@Collin141
Ай бұрын
@@JohnMaleckiUnscrewedThe problem is that by not showing it being done with common sense and the correct tools for safety, you are making the saw seem like more of a death trap than it actually is. Even if you don’t plan on using it to rip, you ought to at least try it properly. Perhaps you should get someone with more expertise to help, like you did with the shop-smith tool. I own a radial arm saw, I use it all the time to rip and crosscut. I don’t own a miter saw and table saw, I don’t have the space to have both of those in my garage.
23:30 take the blade off and spin it through 360 so the wires on the other side of the carrier!! Then you can use the full slide rail.
@bjornolson6527
27 күн бұрын
180 degrees, actually. Derp!😅
@TheWebstaff
18 күн бұрын
@@bjornolson6527 180 on x axis + 180 on a axis= 360? :) But yes your correct.
When I was 17 (back in the 80's) my 1st "propper" job was at a place called Bate Welding and Engineering Supplies. My job was to sharpen TCT saw blades. The biggest ones were for British Rail and they were between 36" and 42". That must have been a monster machine that they went on.
@James-dv1df
Ай бұрын
What sort of machine do you think they would have been used on?
@mromutt
Ай бұрын
@@James-dv1df Something that huge had to be something like a giant mill right? I cant imagine what else could use them. I would love to see a blade that big in person but never want to meet the machine it goes in haha
I use a 14” radial at work daily to rip plywood for export crates. The way I get around the potential kick back is to use a sacrificial board to feed the one I’m cutting through the cut. Also when ripping you can tip your blade guard down so that most of the duct comes out the shoot and not straight back at you.
I do run a radial arm saw every day. Mine is a 14" original saw, the most productive tool in my shop. After I assemble a cut list, I mark out stop locations, turn the saw on, and keep feeding it material until the cutlist is finished. I never take it out of its 90 degree orientation, I'll go so far as to cut the long dimension on the radial arm saw then switch to a miter saw for all the angles. When used in the sort of production environment I'm describing, I find these safe, efficient, and more enjoyable to use than any alternative I've found.
My father had a giant old radial arm saw in his commercial woodworking shop for 20+ years (he made wood windows and doors) and it was pretty much a single task tool, for cross cutting giant rough milled slabs of wood to length, before running through the thickness planer. It just sat on a bench at the back of the warehouse, right between huge racks for lumber storage and I don't think he ever messed with any setting on it ever, except when changing the blade between sharpening, because it was never used for precision. That side of the shop also had the shaper, so I guess it was the "watch your damn fingers!" zone
I bought a 10" Craftsman in about 1975 and used it for many years. When you do rip cuts you rotate the guard so that the leading edge is barely above your wood. That covers the most dangerous part of the blade. A hose from the dust elbow on the top of the guard is run into a dust hood at the back of the saw attached to a shop vac. That gets 90+ % of the dust. It was cleaner to use than most mitre saws today. Straight cut off, mitres, compound bevels, in and out rips were all easy and safe. I did use a dado head on straight dados but would never even think of using a moulding head. Scared the you know what out of me. I finally got rid of it only because a table saw worked better for what I was doing then and I didn't have room for both. But it was a very useful tool. Took a bit of TLC to keep it square though. Adjusted that quite a lot. But the adjustments were easy and straighforward.
I've actually seen machines like this being modified with "primitive breaks". Essentially make a hole in the "blade guard", weld on a threaded pipe. Take a durable cylindrical piece of rubber which fits into the pipe and use that as the "break caliber" - and then use a screw/cap/plunger - whatever you choose to apply it towards the blade. Just be "fairly gentle" when applying break force in a place which was not designed for it - and remember to disengage it before stating it up again. (You can also make a spring-loaded mechanism which automatically disengages when you stop pushing it - however that's a bit more involved 😀)
@TNH91
Ай бұрын
Did you mean brake?
Assuming that this is a 3-phase machine (if I'm mistaken then ignore the rest of this) then you could wire it up to a VFD which will give you lots of benefits: - Slower ramp-up start (saw will no longer want to "jump" towards you on start up) - Option to decrease rpm's of blade (may benefit you when making deep cuts in hardwood) - and perhaps the most useful: option to apply "braking forces" on the blade to more quickly stop it once shut off. ... All of these can be programmed to various settings on a VFD. I think the ability to turn your 3-minute spin-down into 10 seconds would be worth the VFD purchase alone. For both safety and convenience. Loved the video! Old machines are sexy.
I have a radial arm saw and it’s beyond sketchy. Terrifyingly awesome. I love it. I only use it when I’m ok with losing an arm or 2
Hi John , I ve been a carpenter for over 30 years, I've used many radial arms saws, they are great for cross-cutting and doing dato cut . a big 16" saw is good if you work in a mill or a wood yard . all of those other features are great but should never been done . I like using the saw for the cross cut instead of doing the cut on a table saw
This saw looks like a lot of fun. And your dust extraction system really satisfies my tism.
My grandfather has a 10" RAS, and got me a 10" one as well. I use it for crosscut only, as I have other tools for the other cuts. I know he has used his for ripping, and has suggested I try it for ripping also. But I have had thoughs similar to what you experienced, and also have a nice table saw,so I use it instead. So much easier for set up, and safer for usage.
I studied technical theatre in college. Our shop had a huge old time beefy radial arm like this. Everything that came off our bench ran through it. We, quite literally, would have it running for hours. If you can master the radial arm, you are going to have SUCH a productivity boost (especially with batches of goods.) You can do joinery, dado stacks, and quickly bulk out your framing members (I recall we'd use our's to cut 4-5 2 by 4's in one pass.) you simply can't beat it. Never overlook the radial arm! Wish more modern shops used them. We had 18 year old tap dancing acting students running one first day of class haha they're simple but frightening.
@RyTrapp0
29 күн бұрын
Seems like a lot of potential that comes with a lot of learning curve to get the most out of these *safely*
The blade spinning endlessly is a good indicator that the spindle bearings are in need of new grease. Great video John, I think these are excellent for crosscutting.
9:20 when I saw you get that rag so close to the blade to showcase the airflow, I just started sweating when I thought about how it could get caught on the blade and pulled in. Or maybe I am overthinking this and have watched final destination one too many times
@-Kreger-
Ай бұрын
Think everyone thought that :) huge ass blades or machinery and loose cloth gives me the willys.
@RyTrapp0
29 күн бұрын
I was staring at that tail intently as it whipped back and forth😅😅😅😅😅😅
@JoeCook-dp5ew
28 күн бұрын
I just watched you make several errors with your RAS 1. Read the Mister Sawdust book before you use the saw. 2. That saw needs a much bigger/longer table. I use a 3 piece table, 2 pieces behind the fence puts you further from the blade for most cuts. Move the the extra table piece in front only when you need the extra width 3. Make your cross cuts from the left. Hold the stock with your left hand and the saw with the right hand. 4. Throughly inspect the machine and install the missing parts. Anti kick-back bar... 5. When ripping rotate the blade guard to just above the piece being fed into the blade. Adjust the anti-kickback bar to the material thickness. Use a much longer push stick shaped like a tablesaw push stick that fits between blade and fence. 6. All tools require the operator to be familiar with operations. I recently replaced a sliding miter saw with a 1956 Dewalt RAS and I love it. It sits closer to the wall and makes perfect cross cuts and dados. Great tool you have acquired I look forward to more videos as you become proficient with this tool. Keep up the great content.
I ran a 20" in a millshop for years. Beautiful piece of equipment! Wish I had space for a larger one in my own shop.
Hey ... the head isn't aligned to the rail. Seriously. Do a proper alignment of the head to the rail. I have the same saw and I can literally hear it binding. Not much, but it is whacked! Edit!!! I forgot the best part! No brake, and the power switch is not under your finger. 😮 so cool. Great video Malevki
I have personal used one of theses and it is terrifying. We used it to cut pressure treated 6x6x16’ down, it would go right through one of them like a hot knife butter. That saw wouldn’t just cut a finger off it would take ur whole arm off and u wouldn’t even know it.
The king👑 of youtube is back
I saw that final image/diagram was thinking to myself no way he is going to try that!? I wasn't even in the shop and my heart rate was through the roof just watching this video.
Back in '70s I worked for a lumber yard. We used a big 16" radial arm saw for cutting framing lumber. We had very few accidents and when we did we found a bit of crazy glue and a buffing wheel buffed everything right out.
On the vertical rip, you also have to remember that it was standard practice for woodworkers to wear a dress shirt and tie. Imagine doing that cut (or any of them for that matter) with basically an improvised noose around your neck 😬
Dude... I built so many projects on a 10" Craftsman radial saw in my younger days. Did rip cuts, cross cuts, even raised panes with a shaper attachment. I'm luck to be alive. LOL
Dado's, Rabbit's, dental moulding, ect, The radial arm saw is a great shop saw, and when properly maintained is super accurate.
I used to use that saw in our shop when I was doing construction. The shop was an old cabinet shop and that Delta cut smooth.
*Graphic Warning* Yeah, I was eight when my dad chopped three of his fingers off with his radial arm. Still remember him running out of the garage holding his hand up yelling at me on the swingset to not go in there as he'd left it running. That saw is now mine decades later, and while I love the saw, I have a huge amount of respect for what it can do to me if I'm not careful with it. Still even have the blade that cut his fingers off on it lol. For the record, he was ripping wood using the full travel of the saw with all the guards removed. My mother had to find the fingers in a pile of sawdust and put them on ice. Doctors tried to reattach them, only one of the three was successfully reattached.
I grew up using a 10” craftsman radial saw. Always preferred it to the table saw, but happy I have replaced it with a 12” compound miter saw which is so much easier to configure than the radial was. Probably lucky I never did something stupid with it
At work we have an original saw 20" radial arm saw. It's a much newer model. But it's a pleasure to use. We cut a lot of larger timbers with it.
Used one almost exactly like that to cross cut 2x4s for crates. Except we added a dynamic brake and a hand trigger to start it. Never thought twice about using it
This is so amusing. I grew up with a radial arm saw. I was using that before using regular power saws.
My father bought a 10" Dewalt radial saw new in 1958. I still have that saw in my shop today and can't imagine not having it. I have 8 foot in feed and out feed tables on each end of the saw therefor I don't get stuck like you did. As for the blade deflection , your blade is not lined up parallel to the fence. There are adjustments for every aspect of that saw. You had my heart rate up when did the rip cut because you are missing the anti kick back paw!!! My saw still has the original maple top on it and as the humidity changes in the shop I have to check cut squareness every now and then. Get a better operators manual on the saw and it will show all the adjustments that can be done on that saw. By the way I was never brave enough to do the gut cut rip. I use my saw almost every day. Keep up the the good videos and be safe!!! Mike
I miss having my radial arm saws. I have had 3 over the years. My 12" craftsman was a strong work horse. The 14" delta was under powered for hard woods, unless I put a 12" blade on it. And my 16" delta very much like the one you got was a great saw. Mine had a blade break on it. It was just a lever that I would push on to slow the blade spinning down faster
I got taught to use a pretty big cross cut like this at a timber yard for my first job when I was 15, the biggest I ever cut would be a 3x9 sapele or oak board. Biggest tip is keep your arm straight because when it bites or hits a knot it'll yank your absolute arm off, it'll also stop it wanting to "walk off the table" 🤙🏻
I have a 10" and I love it for cross cuts. I'd absolutly pickup a 16" for cutting 4x4s in one pass. Liked for a tear down video.
New to the channel. I like what I see. Thanks for rocking the SOCOM colors on the wall !
The 16 inch radial arm saws shown in Mike's video, and this one, are the only two that I have ever seen.........I want this saw.
We had a pair of these in my high school wood shop. The first month of the class was just safety demonstrations and tests and stuff, but even with all that, I don't know that I'd trust a teenager with tools like this. Also, I really didn't appreciate how dangerous tools like this are until years later, and all we did were cross cuts and miters.
This is one of those "back in my day" tools, that's honestly wild how dangerous that is
You ought to see the rough cut blade they use in sawmills. Some those get up around 60" diameter. I used to work near one and it was a crazy feeling bring close to it
the throwback to „7 and H“ made my day 😂
Holy smokes! Every time you pointed at the saw while the blade was still spinning I was like half out of my chair ready to run for help. I know you were 6' away but it still got me. This saw is great for about 3 functions as long as you need to make long continuous cut runs, say 30 or more. Otherwise there are modern tools that aren't as multi functional, but are much better suited to safely do the same things. That being said I totally want one :)
Used these everyday in uk, brilliant for repeat cuts, depth cuts, ripping rough sawn planks to length, really good for cutting bevelled shoulders on tenons
I have used radial arm saws in both high school shop and in college. We only used them to make cross cuts on rough swan material or dado cuts. Nothing else.
The radial arm saw at my school has like a 12 foot table. We never make rip cuts with it but if we ever did we have a long table so the material can't fall
I been seeing a ton of these 10" on marketplace in my area, 50-100 bucks...I'm getting one just for half laps an such...there is a huge advantage to owning one, and cheap..all the ones I see are craftsman...use to be a time they was everywhere, in school to... But for joinery it's a game changer ..
I love the shop shades ads. What I'd love even more is if you'd actually ship my order out which was ordered March 3rd.
@ChiKusari
29 күн бұрын
Good luck lol. I pre-ordered mine in November of 23 and haven't heard a peep. An update would be nice.
@jasonstewart5942
29 күн бұрын
@@ChiKusari So essentially the ONLY people who actually have these "shop shades" are those in the videos.
@JohnMaleckiUnscrewed
15 күн бұрын
March 3rd orders are being packed up today!
Remiids me of the saw we had in high school shop class!
Can’t wait for the shop shades!
Genuinely anxious watching this.
Ran one of those for a year back in 1972. 16 inch delta we built 2 big project about 2000 2 story apartmens. The thing is a bull. Never laid it on the side . Cross cuts only. Great saw. We built a ply wood table for it 32 ft long 2 ft wide. Waxed table everyday. The wax was driping off the bottom of the plywood after we tore it down .
I have an old Craftsman that does all these things - including being able to set it up as a sander. It's a 12" blade, however. This is the type of tool we used in our old shop class. (I'm old. We were disposable back then.)
Owning one of these, on the rip cut, I often stop it most of the way through and pull the material through from the other side so I can maintain pressure against the fence.
Man, that saw brings back memories! Believe it or not, we had one in our high-school shop class. I used it alot from 9th to 12th grade. Back when men were men lol
We had a radial arm saw in my highschool woodshop. Everyone hated this tool, including myself. The teacher would only let some kids use it lol.
Insane safety practices using this saw!
I used a radial arm saw years ago in high school. It was a great tool and as long as you don't have the saw blade directly pointed at a body part it was super-safe. I only used it for crosscuts and dados so perhaps other functions are more dangerous but for other functions I either used a table saw or hand tools. I always felt the radial arm saw felt safer than the table saw so maybe I'm just different than other users. Maybe it was because I could see the blade where-as with a table saw the blade was often hidden for dado cuts and rabbets. The saw I used had a auto brake function when power was removed which I'm sure makes a difference.
I have a sears/craftsman 10 in radial arm thats been in the family for awhile now it got passed to my dad then me and ive been using it since i was around 10-12 (currently 25) and i had no idea people were that scared of it lol makes me rethink when i use it now also i had no idea the crazy cuts you can make on one
the best part of a radial arm saw is feeling it glide towards you when it gets going. man i dont know why my grandfather let me use his as a kid, still all 10 fingers though.
I've only ever used the radial for rough cross cuts on rough stock to kick off the refining process
My dad had one and wouldn’t use it. One day we did some 90 degree cuts but that was it. My miter saw does anything I would ever use a radial arm saw for. I gave it away a few years ago and said a prayer for the guys that took it.
Yes I wanna see a Before and After Tool Resto Video on this "Carpender Destoryer 9000 Saw"! 😂 Yes to the BATMAN PAINT JOB!
Awesome saw
We had a De Walt 20" radial saw for cutting extruded aluminium box section, 5.5" square. We would occasionally cut mitres, but 99% of the time it was straight cuts. We had 16" and 13" diameter blades too. Never had any accidents on it, at all. We used 13" mitre saws with 13" blades for cutting aluminium too. We would fit at least 2 emergency stop buttons on every machine, just to be safe.
I worked at lumberyard in the early 80's and cut many a deck kit with one of these! 4x4, 4x6, 6x6 piece of cake!
When you mentioned the Batman paint job it made me think of the Adam West Batmobile I that I got from the store the other day. I just had to, it was a pink Adam West- Batmobile! I was laughing thinking of you painting that saw pink.
I have a Delta RAS and use it only with a stacked dado blade. The saw will need to be tuned up and adjusted with several excellent videos on YT showing how.
Serious missed opportunity to partner with a life insurance sponsor for this video
We had the exact same saw in Miron Lumber yard , it was a beast !
John, your segue game is on point! I hardly realize I'm watching an ad until I'm already watching it. #AdGenius
Honestly i can't wait to see what you make with this tool, I see how dangerous it can be. Maybe you could make your own blade guard that doesn't get in the way so you don't have to completely remove it but you are protected. It would be nice if you could add a brake to slow the blade down once the saw is off.
I just ripped my first board on my radial arm saw, the scariest thing I encountered wasn't kick back but the blade lifting the work piece up, sometimes stalling the saw, it's why when ripping your suppose to lower the guard just above the work piece
When I was a senior in HS (late '60's, early '70's) I worked in my grandfather's woodshop. I think that was back when a "miter saw" was a u shaped wood structure that you put your 2X4 wood in and cut it with a handsaw. The 2 pieces of equipment that were most important in his shop were the table saw and the radial arm saw. What you're not showing with the radial arm, at least in our shop, every task on that saw had its own jig and, if there wasn't one existing, we made them. I don't ever remember being scared of the saw. We did lot ripping with it. There were long infeed and outfeed tables to support the wood. As you say, kickback was one of the biggest concerns. We were aware of the dangers of the saw(s) but we had systems and jigs to make them safer.
For the rip cuts you need to adjust the blade guard down at the frint end of the cut to prevent it from picking the material up at the beginning of the cut. And there are anti kickback pauls that are missing that wedge the kerf of the cut at the backside much like a riving knife on a table saw. I rip my plywood with a craftsman 10in radial arm saw (not full sheets, i do full sheets with a straight edge and a circular saw).
Me and my dad own one of these but the 10 inch varient for cutting siding it works great for that we have upgraded to something else now but this is what we used to use
You're editors keep you in front of Sears. Thank you Brother, I Appreciate the sense of humor. Political incorrect is Comedy. GOD BLESS
PRO TIP- For most tools etc, watch direction of blade teth or just sharp part of blade, unscrew in same direction. Hope it helps
Did notice some input about brushes or diodes that could aid in the saw break..honestly I bet some were on the interwebs there's probably something after market for beautiful functioning dinosaurs like that delta..we had a larger version of that at Mt work place..broke my heart when they replace it with a new aged tuuurd do to a part failure for locking down material up to 6x6
@23:20, about your saw being wired as to not extend a certain point. I think the motor has been flipped over. Remove blade and rotate motor 360 degree counter-clockwise as seen at that point in the video. That should freen up the cable for maximum sketchiness.
I could get a lot of use from this i think. I have a track saw that can deal with ply but this baby can do so much with a super solid base great for joinery. Dusty lumber is good at using his and keeping all his blood in his skin. Its all in the setup
I had a DeWalt rad saw in my shop class in high school. there was a hand break to speed up the braking of the blade. I'm not sure if it was "after market" install in the saw or if it was factory? but your saw might have one?
Ahhhh, the good old days. That was what we had to work with. The thing is, once you got comfortable around all those cuts....THAT"S when the accidents happened. I saw the Stumpy Nubs vid with that panel cut photo. That is insane. If you can afford a radial arm saw you surely can afford a Skilsaw and saw horses.
I’m glad you know when to stop, John. …and I’m also glad you know to tell us you know when to stop. It’s one thing for Jim from Stumpy Nubs to calmly explain the dangers while showing a slideshow of the manual pages; it’s quite another for a woodworker to get halfway through demonstrating one of the only-moderately-sketchy cuts before going “f-no-f-no-f-no” and burying the blade in the workpiece to stop it NOW.
I would highly recommend to add VFD (variable frequency driver) for that motor and program DC break so it stops immediately and not after 5 minutes. Also you can program safety stop and slow start and stuff like that.
That saw is insane!
I have one. The motor is going. Some applications are great. It great for lap joints with a dado stack.
Rake angle on teeth helps. It doesn’t grab if it is neutral rake. If you search specifically for radial arm blades they come up. The rip cuts people use a push block that is a flat piece on the surface that pushes the pice and has a bracket with a handle to push it through. Sort of like a food processor pusher.
When I was in high school. We used one of these to make some benches, but the 1 that we use. We put a dato blade on
My grandfather had one of these in his woodworking barn, though I don't think it was a 16". The thing always scared me growing up and when he passed about 10yrs ago I got most of his tools, but I didn't want anything to do with the radial arm saw with how dangerous it always seemed to me.
The timber mill I used to visit as a kid had a 32" version... I saw someone take his thumb off, but was successfully sewn back on