As much as I've been working with wood for over 30 years, I have to admit it wasn't till the beginning of this year that I found the patience to use a scroll saw. I've had 2 previously that I wound up selling because I was constantly breaking blades and loosing my patience. Boy is it great to have the patience now. Most of my projects were larger items; oak ice boxes, furniture and the biggest of all, my 1929 Model A Ford truck. I've made the Christmas presents for family and employees for about the last 10 years and when the numbers grew, the size had to get smaller. My first scroll saw project was a scenery based wooden saw blade I got the pattern for ... just to try. I'm currently working on another with more detail. I've made vases of roses, welcome signs of different styles and even used it when I made some working wooden padlocks I thought were interesting. I've added compressed air to the scroll saw as well as a foot switch and worklight over the last couple months. I'm really looking forward to checking out some of the other members work as well as sharing some of my own.
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Howdy! Pop from Pa.
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Welcome to the group, PopThere are some pretty sharp blades in this here little family ( no, I'm not one of them
) and they have been an immense help to me
...enjoy !...~Robert~
DW788 and Hawk 226
" Please let me grow to be the man my dog thinks I am "
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Welcome Pop, tell us more about this compressed air addition to the scroll saw. Please. Also what kind of saws do you have, we are a very nosy bunch..Chuck D
When a work lifts your spirits and inspires bold and noble thoughts in you, do not look for any other standard to judge by: the work is good, the product of a master craftsman.
Jean De La Bruyere...
l
Hegner 18, Delta p-20, Griz 14 inch Band saw
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Welcome Pop! Felton, PA, is that out in the York/Lancaster area?
So where did you suddenly find this elusive patience so necessary for scrolling? I'd like to get a refill myself sometime.Homer : "Oh, and how is education supposed to make me feel smarter. Besides, every time I learn something new, it pushes some old stuff out of my brain."
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Bill...I hope you don't discover 'patience' the way I discovered it. For health reasons, I've pretty much s-l-o-w-e-d down everything. Funny when you retire and quit 'running' at 100 mph, you find it boring at first. Then when the old body decides to catch up from all that 'running', you discover you really missed a lot as you ran past it. I've rediscoverd all the joy of wood working and how you can try to pass on that passion by sharing what you can do with the next generation. Kinda like the Model A hobby I have too. And yes... Felton is just below York and Red Lion. My father-in-law used to tell everyone he needed his Visa and Passport to come visit we were so far out.
ChuckD... my shop is equipped with air throughout because of all the pneumatic tools I have from restoring/building the Model A Handyman truck. I added a pressure regulator and flex tube to the scrollsaw and plugged it into the system. Easy to do actually.
After 'surfing' all through the site, it seems there a mass amount of knowledeg base here. Although typing is a flat medium, I get the impression we've got some great personalities too just from reading posts and replies. I've just posted some of my projects on the bragging section. Please look them over and tell me what you think.Last edited by Pop; 12-29-2006, 01:39 PM.Pop
Delta 16" 40-530
Ryobi 16" VS
"Never be afraid to try something new. Remember it was amateurs that built the ARK but Professionals that built the Titanic!"
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Hello again POP, I assume then you are using the compressed air to blow the sawdust off the saw! Interesting!!Chuck D
When a work lifts your spirits and inspires bold and noble thoughts in you, do not look for any other standard to judge by: the work is good, the product of a master craftsman.
Jean De La Bruyere...
l
Hegner 18, Delta p-20, Griz 14 inch Band saw
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Welcome Pop. Have we got a lot of questions for you!!!Mike
Craftsman 16" VS, Puros Indios and Sam Adams!
Scrollin' since Jun/2006
My Gallery
http://scrollcrafters.com (reciprocal links welcomed)
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Reply to Hello from Central Floridaby John SmithThanks guys, I have a lot of HDU left over from my sign business in various thicknesses.
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Reply to Hello from Central Floridaby Sandy OaksWelcome to the forum from TN. As a Pegas Distributor, Pegas has the Super Skip blades which works perfectly with acrylics at a reduced speed.
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Reply to Hello from Central Floridaby RolfWelcome to the group. I look forward to seeing more of your work. You will probably need to slow down you scroll saw when cutting the urethane on the scroll saw. If the blade gets to hot it will fuse back together.
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Reply to Hello from Central Floridaby John Smiththanks for the kind words - I'm not really a scroller "enthusiast", per se. I like to make dimensional signs and have always used the band saw, routers, or Roto-Zip to cut the elements out then do some handcarving to perk them up a bit. I'll put some of my projects in my folder later on....
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