fab question...sort of

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate
links, including eBay, Amazon, Skimlinks, and others.

Joined
Sep 13, 2003
Threads
109
Messages
2,149
Location
Wichita, KS
This may be a dumb question but I'm looking at getting a compound miter saw for home. Is it possible to run a cutoff wheel in it for the times I'll be cutting tubing and such? It would be nice to use it for both rather than get a separate cutoff saw. If it's a dumb idea let me have it.
 
It will tear up the saw in a hurry, and you have to be very careful that the saw will not exceed the maximum RPM for the cutoff wheel, but it is doable. I used to run an abrasive blade in an old circular saw for making longer cuts(pre sawzall/bandsaw days). It works, and I still have and use the saw, but it will take its toll on the equipment in a hurry.

So basically the answer is, if the saw is safe(i.e. doesn't exceed the blade's max RPM), then yes, it will work, but I wouldn't do it a lot if you want the saw to last.

Ary
 
Thanks

That's kind of what I was expecting. Since I'm not a carpenter I think I can get away with a slightly less expensive miter saw and put the $$ saved towards a cutoff wheel.
 
Go pawn shopping for an old makita or milwalkee 10" chop saw ($50)- the arbor on the saw will accept an 8" cutoff wheel. Both run at about 5400 rpm.
 
Keep in mind, the cutoff wheel I'm referring to is an abrasive wheel, like those typically found in a 4.5" grinder, but larger. You cannot run a "cold saw" blade in a miter saw. Cold saws have incredible torque output and spin very slowly.

The abrasive wheels are cheap and disposable, you will eat through a few if you do any significant cutting with them. They look just like a chop saw blade, only smaller.

Ary
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top Bottom